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Published byLesley Skinner Modified over 9 years ago
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Soc 322 – Corporate Crime Corporate crime is rampant in the US (Business schools see ethics as “irrelevant”!) CC is linked with political corruption Profit and Power drive Corp crime CC is much more harmful than street crime (cost, death, injury, etc.)
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Soc 322 – Corporate Crime CC kills and injures more people than street crime Examples: Unsafe worksites (worker death/injury) Toxic “dumping” and general pollution Unsafe food and drugs Unnecessary surgery (patients) Unsafe cars (drivers, passengers) Unsafe homes, schools, etc.
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Soc 322 – Corporate Crime CC costs at least 20x as much as street crime Looting of companies S&L scandals, Enron Fraud Money laundering Corporate scams Cost tens of billions of dollars -- costs passed on to the public – us!
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Soc 322 – Corporate Crime The “subprime” and S&L scams and now the recent “financial meltdown” – how it all works The Depression Regulation and “Insurance” Deregulation
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Soc 322 – Corporate Crime Reform movements and government regulation Who rules America? Big Business (de-regulation) vs. Big Government (regulation) (corp/polit manipulation & public confusion)
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Soc 322 – Corporate Crime Corp Criminology as “Academic Siberia” The “Muckrakers” (early 1900s) The Depression years (1930s) “White Collar Crime” (after WW2)
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Soc 322 – Corporate Crime Numerous “scandals” over decades: Ralph Nader’s “Unsafe at any Speed” Towns/schools built on toxic dumps Thalidomide and birth defects Ford and the “rolling firebomb” (Pinto) Wave of corporate scandals in 1990s Many billions of dollars “missing” in Iraq
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Soc 322 – Corporate Crime The emergence of “Criminal Justice” in 1970s finally completely “marginalized” corporate crime as an academic & research discipline. Federal money defined the field of study Corporate criminology labeled as “deviant” (radical, extreme, etc.)
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Soc 322 – Corporate Crime Types of Corporate Crime Sketched on Outline
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Soc 322 – Corporate Crime Corporate Predators Authors and “corporate watch” No government/foundation efforts to document or collect data on corporate crimes – corporate owned media distorts the problem
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Soc 322 – Corporate Crime Ralph Nader’s introduction: Two goals of corporations: Increase revenues (“market share”) Socialize costs (pass costs to public)
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Soc 322 – Corporate Crime Comments on Chapters Know basic points and major examples in each chapter Sketched in Outline
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Soc 322 – Corporate Crime Next week -- Exam 1 Do the practice exam!!! Questions before the exam? use email
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