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This volume speaks to the fundamental issues inherent in trying to understand the who-what-where-and-whys of corporate crime. Only in addressing these larger issues does it become possible to begin to integrate the study of corporate crime into the larger criminological theory literature.
List of contents
Preface (editors)
Part I. Setting the Stage: Crime and Theories of the Firm1. Moral Responsibility and Theories of the Firms
Eric Orts2. Corporate Criminal Liability and the Purposes of Punishment
Robert Hughes3. Some Reflections on the "Corporate Offender" in Criminal Law
William S. Laufer & Susana Aires de SousaPart II. Corporate Victimization4. What Do We Owe Victims of Corporate Crime?
Mihailis Diamantis5. Corporate Crime, Capture, and the Opioid Crisis
Miranda A. Galvin6. Corporate Crime Victimization in the Gambling Industry
Melissa Rorie & Matthew West7. Weaving webs of compliance: Integrating vertical and horizontal prevention of corporate involvement in human rights violations
Wim Huisman & Susanne Karstedt Part III. Corporate Offending8. Applying Opportunity Theory to Corporate Offending and Victimization
Michael L. Benson & Diana Sun9. Corporate Wrongdoing and Shareholders
Vic Khanna10. Patterns of Corporate Life Course Offending
Sally S. Simpson, Cristina Layana & Miranda A. Galvin11. Structure, Agency, and the Role of the State in Corporate Crime: Negotiating Current and Contemporary Challenges to Human Safety
Kenneth Sebastian LeonAfterword: Corporate Criminal Justice
(editors)
About the author
William S. Laufer is the Aresty Professor of Legal Studies and Business Ethics, Sociology, and Criminology at the University of Pennsylvania. He is the Co-Director of the Zicklin Center for Governance and Business Ethics at the Wharton School, the co-sponsor of a wide range of business ethics research projects from the CPA-Zicklin Index for Corporate Accountability to the work of the Amazon Research Center. Prof. Laufer studies corporate criminal liability, prosecution, and punishment.
Miranda A. Galvin is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology and Criminology at the Pennsylvania State University. Her research interests include white-collar crime, criminal sentencing, prosecution, and policy impacts. She earned her Ph.D. in Criminology and Criminal Justice at the University of Maryland, receiving the Charles A. Caramello Award for Distinguished Dissertation for her work on the federal case processing of white-collar crime.