ABSTRACT

Understanding White-Collar Crime develops the concept of convenience as the main explanation for crime occurrence. Examining all three dimensions of crime—economic, organizational, and behavioral—the book argues that when white-collar crime becomes less convenient, crime rates will go down. By applying convenience theory to an empirical sample of convicted white-collar criminals, the text teaches criminal justice students and ethics and compliance practitioners to identify and understand how opportunity affects real-world criminal situations. Internal investigations of white-collar crime are discussed, and corporate social responsibility against white-collar crime is emphasized.

Understanding White-Collar Crime: A Convenience Perspective examines not only the theories behind white-collar crime, but also explores methods used in criminal justice investigations into corporate fraud, and emphasizes the importance of corporate social responsibility in reducing crimes of this nature. Criminal justice students and practitioners should not miss this close look into the world of white-collar crime.

chapter 1|20 pages

Convenience theory of white-collar crime

chapter 2|14 pages

Economical dimension in convenience theory

chapter 4|32 pages

Behavioral dimension in convenience theory

chapter 5|34 pages

Integrated approach to convenience theory

chapter 6|22 pages

Empirical study of white-collar criminals

chapter 8|24 pages

Corporate social responsibility

chapter 9|32 pages

Internal white-collar crime investigations

chapter 10|16 pages

The case of the Betanien investigation