By its nature,
white-collar crime is non-physical, covert and immediate in impact (Edelhertz, 1970).
However, senior lawyers want to debate his approach to deal with cases of
white-collar crime.
Earlier this week, we saw the Government publish their proposals on
white-collar crime.
The training will explain investigative techniques for solving
white-collar crimes, anti-money laundering, asset tracing techniques, digital forensic investigation, cyber-crimes and cyber security.
In this book, author Petter Gottschalk presents readers with a comprehensive examination of historic and contemporary
white-collar crime, arguing that convenience is the main driver behind
white-collar crime.
Conservative advocates of
white-collar crime reform point to an entirely different galaxy of examples to prove their case.
Disdaining and evading OHS regulations and the consideration of deterrence in relation to prevention and response to corporate crimes and safety crimes were studied historically and termed as 'criminaloid' by Ross (1907); '
white-collar crime' by Sutherland (1940, 1944), Chambliss (1967), and Edelhertz (1970); 'organisational crime' by Schrager and Short (1978); 'corporate crime' by Clinard and Yeager (1980); 'organisational deviance' by Ermann and Lundman (1981); 'upper-world crime' by Geis (1982); and in recent times 'occupational crime' by Green (1997); and 'elite deviance' by Simon (2006).
Tolman said consumer, environmental and
white-collar crime issues top his agenda.
In this text for students in criminal justice, authors Di Marino (Kaplan University) and Roberson (Washburn University) describe different types of
white-collar crime, such as banking and currency related crimes, and racketeering and organized crime.
The concept of deviant behavior propounded as
White-Collar crime is not new.