As documented in a number of case studies (from Telia Telecom in Sweden to Wirecard in Germany) in this book, recidivism seems to be of a substantial magnitude in corporate crime. Corporations tend to repeat white-collar offenses such as financial crime and environmental crime in various forms as long as they find it convenient. A minor fine from time to time and dismissal of some executives as scapegoats do not prevent corporations from committing and concealing new offenses as long as there is a convenient financial motive, a convenient organizational opportunity, and a convenient willingness for deviant behavior. Businesses and their executives tend to be recidivists who get away with light punishment in most jurisdictions.
The relevant audiences for this book include law students, business students, sociology students, and criminology students. Fraud examiners, defense attorneys, compliance officers, police investigators, as well as prosecutors can find the structural model of convenience to be an ideal template in preparing corporate crime case narratives.
关于作者
Petter Gottschalk is Professor Emeritus at the Department of Leadership and Organizational Behavior at the Norwegian Business School, Norway. Petter Gottschalk was educated at Technische Universitât Berlin, Dartmouth College, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Henley Management College. He held chief executive positions in business before joining academics as a professor. Dr. Gottschalk has published extensively on knowledge management, fraud investigation, and white-collar crime.