Corporate compliance: crime, convenience and control
Corporate compliance: crime, convenience and control
Compliance has long been identified by scholars of white-collar crime as a key strategic control device in the regulation of corporations and complex organisations. Nevertheless, this essential process has been largely ignored within criminology as a specific subject for close scrutiny - Corporate Compliance: Crime, Convenience and Control seeks to address this anomaly. This initiating book applies the theory of convenience to provide criminological insight into the enduring self-regulatory phenomenon of corporate compliance. Convenience theory suggests that compliance is challenged when the corporation has a strong financial motive for illegitimate profits, ample organisational opportunities to commit and conceal wrongdoing, and executive willingness for deviant behaviour. Focusing on white-collar deviance and crime within corporations, the book argues that lack of compliance is recurrently a matter of deviant behaviour by senior executives within organisations who abuse their privileged positions to commission, commit and conceal financial crime.
Hamerton, Christopher
49e79eba-521a-4bea-ae10-af7f2f852210
Gottschalk, Petter
1ee888b0-7e8a-447c-b40f-7189aefede6f
31 October 2022
Hamerton, Christopher
49e79eba-521a-4bea-ae10-af7f2f852210
Gottschalk, Petter
1ee888b0-7e8a-447c-b40f-7189aefede6f
Hamerton, Christopher and Gottschalk, Petter
(2022)
Corporate compliance: crime, convenience and control
,
London.
Palgrave Macmillan, 378pp.
Abstract
Compliance has long been identified by scholars of white-collar crime as a key strategic control device in the regulation of corporations and complex organisations. Nevertheless, this essential process has been largely ignored within criminology as a specific subject for close scrutiny - Corporate Compliance: Crime, Convenience and Control seeks to address this anomaly. This initiating book applies the theory of convenience to provide criminological insight into the enduring self-regulatory phenomenon of corporate compliance. Convenience theory suggests that compliance is challenged when the corporation has a strong financial motive for illegitimate profits, ample organisational opportunities to commit and conceal wrongdoing, and executive willingness for deviant behaviour. Focusing on white-collar deviance and crime within corporations, the book argues that lack of compliance is recurrently a matter of deviant behaviour by senior executives within organisations who abuse their privileged positions to commission, commit and conceal financial crime.
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
Published date: 31 October 2022
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 470518
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/470518
PURE UUID: 37b873d0-b086-4e2b-a61b-90b25a6dfbb2
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 12 Oct 2022 16:42
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:52
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Petter Gottschalk
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics