Bad guys: Why the public supports punishing white-collar offenders

被引:0
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作者
Francis T. Cullen
Jennifer L. Hartman
Cheryl Lero Jonson
机构
[1] University of Cincinnati,Division of Criminal Justice
[2] University of North Carolina at Charlotte,undefined
[3] University of Cincinnati,undefined
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关键词
Corporate Executive; National Poll; Corporate Crime; Corporate Scandal; Street Crime;
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摘要
Until the latter part of the 1960s, the American public was inattentive to the problem of crime in the upperworld. Due to a confluence of events (e.g., Watergate affair, Vietnam War, civil rights movement), concern about this lawlessness rose precipitously in the 1970s. Public attention toward and willingness to punish white-collar crime has persisted into the twenty-first century. We argue, however, that due to a series of recent scandals (e.g., Enron, WorldCom), public opinion about upperworld offenders has been transformed qualitatively. High-profile offenders are now seen not as respected community citizens but as “bad guys” whose crimes reflect inordinate greed and a disturbing lack of concern for victims. This typification is conducive to the prosecution of white-collar offenders but may have the unanticipated consequence of deflecting attention away from structural sources of corporate illegal enterprises.
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页码:31 / 44
页数:13
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