Ulteriori informazioni
Sommario
Introduction: Compliance and Its Measurement Benjamin van Rooij and Melissa Rorie; Part I. The Compliance Industry, the State, and Measurement Needs: 2. Legal and Regulatory Use and Measurement of Compliance Programs Hui Chen; 3. Measuring Compliance in the Age of Governance: How the Governance Turn Has Impacted Compliance Measurement by the State Karin van Wingerde and Lieselot Bisschop; 4. Understanding the Role of Power Distributions in Compliance Todd Haugh; Part II. Quantitative Approaches to Measuring Corporate Compliance: 5. Self-Report Surveys and Factorial Survey Instruments Melissa Rorie; 6. The Use of Randomized Experiments for Assessing Corporate Compliance Melissa Rorie; 7. A Practical Way to Measure Corporate Compliance Efforts Ricardo Pellafone; 8. Measuring Compliance Risk and the Emergence of Analytics Eugene Soltes; 9. Using Regulatory Inspection Data to Measure Environmental Compliance Sarah Stafford; 10. Using Outcomes to Measure Aggregate-Level Compliance: Justifications, Challenges, and Practices Florentin Blanc and Paola Coletti; Part III. Qualitative Approaches to Measuring Corporate Compliance: 11. Engaging Qualitative Research Approaches to Investigate Compliance Motivations: Understanding the How and Why of Compliance Sara R. Rinfret and Michelle C. Pautz; 12. Admitting noncompliance: Interview strategies for assessing undetected legal deviance Benjamin van Rooij and Melissa Rorie; 13. Compliance Ethnography: What gets lost in compliance measurement Benjamin van Rooij, Yunmei Wu and Na Li; Part IV. Mixed Methods and Building on Existing Compliance Research: 14. Mixing and Combining Research Strategies and Methods to Understand Compliance Nicholas Lord and Aleksandra Jordanoska; 15. Using Meta-Analysis/Systematic Review to Examine Corporate Compliance Natalie Schell-Busey; 16. Data Simulations as a Means of Improving Compliance Measurement Matthew P. West and Melissa Rorie.
Info autore
Melissa Rorie is an Associate Professor of Criminal Justice at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas (UNLV). Her research predominantly examines the impact of formal and informal controls on corporate and white-collar offending as well as theoretical explanations for elite crime and corporate noncompliance.Benjamin van Rooij is Professor of Law and Society at the Faculty of Law, University of Amsterdam and Global Professor of Law at the University of California, Irvine. His research focuses on individual differences in compliance, toxic corporate culture, and assumptions about behavioral change.
Riassunto
This book provides the first comprehensive overview of the different approaches to measure corporate compliance. It addresses the strengths and weaknesses of various methods and offers both academics and practitioners guidance in how to best use each measure (or multiple measures) for different purposes.
Prefazione
Measuring Corporate Compliance is a 'one-stop-shop' for individuals looking to assess the effectiveness of compliance programs and policies.