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Published bySheila Kennedy Modified over 6 years ago
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Lecture 15: Responding to the Challenge of White Collar Crime
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Goal To achieve a more effective response to white collar crime.
How? Raise consciousness about white collar crime. Adopt structural, normative, and preventative policies.
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Business ethics courses
Ethical committees/ombudsmen Ethics or compliance officers Sanctions
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Positive Sanctions Use of pleasant incentives/rewards to make people conform to laws prohibiting white collar offenses. E.g., grants, tax credits, favorable administrative consideration.
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Negative Sanctions Actions that discourage the repetition or continuation of behavior. Can range from mild to severe, formal to informal. E.g., imprisonment, fines, adverse publicity; stigma.
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Four justifications for punishment:
Retribution: punishment should be comparable in severity to the deviance itself. Deterrence: requires that the pains of punishment outweigh the pleasures of deviance.
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Rehabilitation: views deviance as the product of social problems (e. g
Rehabilitation: views deviance as the product of social problems (e.g., poverty) or personal problems (e.g., mental illness); social offenders are improved and offenders subjected to intervention appropriate to their condition. Social Protection: believes that if society is unwilling or unable to improve offenders or reform social conditions, protection from further deviance is necessary by incarceration or execution.
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Formal Sanctions Formal sanctions are applied in a public setting. E.g., awarding a prize (positive), announcing a fine (negative).
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Informal Sanctions Actions by groups/individuals that arise spontaneously with little or no formal direction. E.g., smiles, handshakes (positive); frowns, gossip, impolite treatment (negative).
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