White Collar Crime

Cards (50)

  • What is the focus of Sociology LT13?
    Crimes of the powerful, specifically middle class white collar crimes
  • What are the two main types of white collar crime?
    Corporate crime and occupational crime
  • Who is an example of corporate crime mentioned in the study material?
    Nick Leeson for fraudulent trading leading to Barings bank collapse
  • What is occupational crime?
    Crime committed at the expense of an organization
  • Why do the powerful often avoid criminalization of their actions?
    They can shape the law to avoid criminalization
  • What approach do postmodernists take towards crime?
    They adopt a transgressive approach, viewing crime as acts causing harm, regardless of legality
  • What types of harms does corporate crime create according to Tombs (2013)?
    Physical, environmental, and economic harms
  • What are examples of financial crimes mentioned?
    Tax evasion and money laundering
  • What is a state-corporate crime?
    Harms caused by government institutions and businesses cooperating
  • What is an example of a state-corporate crime?
    The Challenger space shuttle disaster in 1986
  • Why is the scale of white collar corporate crime vast?
    High-status professionals occupy positions of trust and respectability
  • What fine did KPMG pay for its role in fraud?
    $456 million
  • How do health professionals abuse their trust?
    By making false claims against healthcare providers
  • Why are white collar and corporate crimes considered relatively invisible?
    They are not visible to the eye and often removed from official definitions of crime
  • What is a significant problem caused by the invisibility of white collar crime?
    Official statistics underestimate middle class crime
  • What role does biased media coverage play in the perception of corporate crime?
    It reinforces the belief that crime is primarily a working class problem
  • Why is there a lack of political will to tackle corporate crime?
    Government crackdowns focus on street crime
  • What makes corporate crimes difficult to detect?
    Their global nature and complexity
  • What is de-labelling in the context of corporate crime?
    Corporate crime is often treated as a civil law matter rather than a criminal law matter
  • How has the visibility of corporate crimes changed since the financial collapse in 2008?
    Corporate crimes have become more visible due to media and protest groups
  • What does Merton’s strain theory suggest about crime?
    Crime results from the inability to achieve societal goals through legitimate means
  • How does Box (1983) apply Merton’s concept of ‘innovation’ to corporate crime?
    Businesses may turn to illegal means when they cannot achieve profit goals
  • What did Clinard and Yeager (1980) find regarding businesses and law-breaking?
    Businesses break the law more when financial performance declines
  • What do some suggest about occupational crime and successful individuals?
    It can arise when successful individuals face financial difficulties and innovate to sustain their lifestyle
  • What does Sutherland (1949) suggest about crime?

    Crime is learned from others in a social context
  • How can a business culture influence corporate crime?
    A culture that justifies crime can socialize employees into criminality
  • What do Sykes & Matza (1957) suggest about deviant subcultures?
    There is little evidence of distinct deviant subcultures; individuals drift in and out of delinquency
  • What does labelling theory suggest about crime?
    Whether an act counts as a crime depends on whether it has been labelled as such
  • How do middle class individuals negotiate non-criminal labels for their deviance?
    They are more able to negotiate these labels compared to lower classes
  • How do corporate organizations avoid labelling?
    They can afford expensive lawyers and accountants to disguise illegal activities
  • What is selective law enforcement?
    It refers to the tendency of the criminal justice system to investigate and prosecute white collar crimes less frequently
  • What do Marxists argue about the relationship between labelling theory and corporate crime?
    Labelling theory fails to consider the structural origins and causes of white collar crime
  • How does Chambliss view global capitalism?
    He argues it is criminogenic, creating pressures for white collar crime
  • What is an example of corporate tax avoidance mentioned?
    Companies like Starbucks, Google, and Facebook paying little or no corporation tax in the UK
  • What do Marxists claim about capitalism's control of the state?
    It allows the powerful to avoid making or enforcing laws that conflict with their interests
  • What is the cost of tax fraud compared to benefit fraud?
    The cost of tax fraud is four times that of benefit fraud
  • How do Marxists view selective law enforcement?
    They see it as serving an ideological function, creating the belief that crime is a working class problem
  • What is the ideological function of prosecuting some corporate crime?
    It creates the illusion that the law operates equally, preventing social unrest
  • How do Marxists view corporate crime in poorer developing countries?
    They argue that companies exploit these countries by selling unsafe products and paying low wages
  • What do postmodernists like Katz (1988) argue about motivations for white collar crime?
    They suggest that thrill-seeking and risk-taking may motivate white collar crime