White-collar crime and criminal career
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Contributions
- Waring, Elin J. - Contributor
Publication
2001 - Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, England
Language
English
Word Count
47,250 words, Guess
Page Count
189 pages
Identifiers
- Internet Archivewhitecollarcrime00weis
- Internet Archivewhitecollarcrime0000weis
- Internet Archivewhitecollarcrime0000weis_a4f6
- ISBN-100521771625
- ISBN-100521777631
and 9 more
- ISBN-139780521771627
- ISBN-139780521777636
- Goodreads391393', '1085291
- LibraryThing4536417
- Library of Congress Control Number00031260
- OCLC Control Number505195496
- Better World Books9780521771627
- Better World Books9780521777636
- Open LibraryOL22370255M
Classifications
- DDC364.16/8
- LCCHV6768 .W44 2001
Description
"Criminologists have turned their attention to the origins and paths of the criminal career for what this approach reveals about the causes, manifestations, and prevention of crime. Studies of the criminal career to date have focused on common criminals and street crime; criminologists have overlooked the careers of white-collar offenders. David Weisburd and Elin Waring offer here the first detailed examination of the criminal careers of people convicted of white-collar crimes.". "Who are repeat white-collar criminals, and how do their careers differ from those of offenders found in more traditional crime samples? Weisburd and Waring uncover some surprising findings, which upset some long-held common wisdom about white-collar criminals. Most scholars, for example, have assumed that white-collar criminals, unlike other types of offenders, are unlikely to have multiple or long criminal records. As Weisburd and Waring demonstrate, a significant number of white-collar criminals have multiple contacts with the criminal justice system and like other criminals, they are often led by situational forces such as financial or family crises to commit crimes. White-collar criminals share a number of similarities in their social and economic circumstances with other types of criminals. Weisburd and Waring are led to a portrait of crimes and criminals that is very different from that which has traditionally dominated criminal career studies. It focuses less on the categorical distinctions between criminals and noncriminals and more on the importance of the immediate context of crime and its role in leading otherwise conventional people to violate the law."--BOOK JACKET.
Subjects
Series Statement
- Cambridge studies in criminology
Other Editions
- White-collar crime and criminal career
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