TrustedCriminals –White-CollarCriminality

Lecturer: Éva Inzelt, Assistant Professor, Department of Criminology

Office hours: Monday 14:00 – 16:00 pm, Room 317.

E-mail:

Coursedescription

Albeittheterm of white-collarcrime has beenintroducedby Edwin H. Sutherlandin 1939 as „a crimecommittedby a person of respectability and highsocial status inthecourse of hisoccupation” (Sutherland 1949: 9), wecanstatethatthistype of crime has beenexistingsincethe establishment of thefirstsocieties. The nature of white-collarcrimedependsontheactualstate (health) of thesocietywhich is relatedtotheculture and thepoliticalsystem of a given country, aswellastothe international environmentviaeffects of political and economic relations.

The aim of thecourse is toanswerbasiccriminologicalquestionsaboutthenature, theprevalence, offenderprofiles, thevictimization, thecausation, theprevention and thedeterrence of whitecollarcrime. Duringthecoursetypical (American and European) white-collarcrimecaseswill be analyzed. Typicalexamples of thistype of crimeoccurredin Hungary duringthelasttwodecadeswill be discussed.

Incriminology, severalconceptshavebeendevelopedtograspforms of crimecommittedinthecontext of organizations, suchaswhite-collarcrime, corporatecrime, statecrime, occupationalcrime, governmentalcrime, state-corporatecrime and financecrime. Studiesontheseforms of crimehavepointedatthesignificance of thefactthatthecrimesarecommittedbypeoplewhoenjoy a relativelyhighlevel of trust and respectability and whoareoperatinginthecontext of organizations. Whileit is generallyacknowledgedthatsuchwhite-collarcrime is veryharmfultosociety.

Duringthecoursewewillusefilms and You-tubeclipstounderstandthecases. Intheclassestherewill be groupdiscussionondefinitions, theories and explanations of whitecollarcrime.

Courseschedule

Lecture 1: Introductionthestudy of crime and criminality: The basis of criminologicalinquiry. Introductiontothewhitecollarcrimeresearch.

- What is crime?

- Basic concepts and generalintroduction

- Criminal Policy

- CriminalJustice System

- What is Criminology?

- Whystudywhitecollarcrime?

Lecture 2: Definitions and concepts of whitecollarcrimestudies/organizationalcriminology.

- Definitions

- Schafer István, Edwin Sutherland

- Sutherland – Tappandebate

- Debatingthelegitimacy of whitecollarcrimestudies

- Accepting a class/administrationbiasedinterpretation of criminality (Braithwaite, Slapper and Tombs, Sutherland)

- Rationaleforstudyingwhitecollarcrimes (social, economic, environmentalharm, behavior, sciences, generalunderstanding of societalculture, institutional and societaltrust, fluctuatingnature of crime and definition of criminalconductotherthanpurelylegalaspects)

- White collarcrimeas an umbrellaterm (Friedrichs, Nelken)

o White collarcrime/occupationalcrime

o Corporatecrime/organizationalcrime

o State-corporate/ State-sponsoredcorporatecrime

 The problemwithpublic-privatepartnerships

 The medicine-industrycomplex

- Approachestowhitecollarcrimeinthe USA and Europe

- White collarcrimetoday

Lecture 3-4-5: Theoreticalbackground of organizationalcriminology, explanations of whitecollarcrime

- Theories of whitecollar and organizationalcriminality

- Sutherland: DifferentialAssociationTheory, towards a generalexplanation of crime

- Geis, Meier and Salinger: White collarcrime: Classic and contemporaryviews

- Maurice Punch: Whymanagersmurder and corporationskill: ineffect an explanation of means, motive and opportunitystructureswithinorganizations

The managerial mind and thecorporateculture

o Size and complexity

o Goals

o The companyas a totalinstitution

o ArguingtheCorporateCulture

o Means/Motive/Opportunitystructures

- Commitment and the Organization (Randall) /The Organization Man (Whyte)

- Henry Mintzberg: Organizationalstructure

- Needleman and Needleman: Twomodels of criminogenisis

- Hirschi and Gottfredson and human naturetheory

- Neutralizationtheory

- Rationalchoicetheory

- Organizationalstructure

- Shapiro: socialorganization of trust

- Anomie and corporatestructure: Durkheim, MertonMessner and Rosenfeld, NikosPassas

- Capitalismassocialstructure

- Markets and industrystructure

Casestudies:

1. ExxonValdezOilSpill

2. Challenger Disaster

3. Dr Nancy Olivieri and Apotex Inc.

4. Bernard ‘Bernie’ Madoff

5. Ford PintoCase

6. Globex

Lecture 6-7: Empiricalresearch and whitecollarcrime.

- Sutherland’s initialstudy

- Radical and Criticalcriminology (1970s USA)

- Quantitative and QualitativeTraditions (casestudies, courtcasedatacollection)

- Analysisbasedoncategoriesortypes of corporatecrime:

o Type of lawatissue: antitrust, employment, legislation etc.

o Identification of victimse.g. consumers

o Employmentrelationshipe.g. discrimination, protection, wagelaws, safety, etc.

o Harmtotheenvironment

- Industryspecificcasestudies: pharmaceutical, automobile, oil, chemical, financialindustries

- Measuringwhitecollarcrime

- Latency/Limitations of criminallaw

- Corruptionperception index

- Victimizationsurveys

- Eurobarometer

Lecture 8-9: Respondingtowhitecollarcriminality

- Christopher D. Stone: Wherethelawends: The Social control of corporatebehaviour

- Eric Colvin: CorporatePersonality and CriminalLiability

- Clarson: KickingCorporateBodies and DamningTheirSouls

- Stuart Field: CorporateLiability and Manslaughter: Shouldwe be goingDutch?

- Regulatingwhitecollarcrime

- Prosecution of whitecollarcrimes

- Prevention

- (White collar) Criminal policy

Students will be requiredtopresent a casestudy of theirownchoosing, usingthetheories and conceptsthathavebeendiscussedwithintheduration of thecourse. Presentations must last no longerthan 20 minutes.

Lastlecture of thesemester

- Discussiononthecourseitself, conclusion, lessonslearnt, experiences

Literature

- Friedrichs, D.O. (2010). Trustedcriminals: whitecollarcrimeincontemporarysociety (4th edition). Belmont, Calif.:WadsworthCengageLearning.

- Brian K. Payne: White-collarCrime. The Essentials. SAGE Publications, 2013.

- Erp-Huisman-Vande-Walle(eds.): The RoutledgeHandbook of White-Collar and CorporateCrimein Europe. Routledge, 2015. ISBN 978-0-415-72214-8

- MaterialsavailableonNeptun

- Lectures

Assessment/exam

Students couldchooseeithertogive a presentation (on an agreedtopic) ortowrite an atleast 18’000 characterspaperonthetopic of thecourse (agreedinadvancewiththeteacher). Submissiondeadlinefortheessay: lastweek of thesemester.

Difficultylevel

Students participatingin BA or MA program arewelcome.