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Unjust Enrichment and Countervailing Obligations

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Corporate Crime: The Firm as Victim and Offender

Edited by: William S. Laufer, Miranda A. Galvin

ISBN13: 9780367536664
To be Published: July 2025
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £145.00



This volume speaks to the fundamental issues inherent in trying to understand the who-what-where-and-whys of corporate crime. Only in addressing these larger issues does it become possible to begin to integrate the study of corporate crime into the larger criminological theory literature. A collection of chapters by experts in the field grapples with three deceptively simple questions:

  • When are firms morally and legally responsible agents?
  • What are the harms of corporate wrongdoing and who are the victims?
  • What theories offer insight to explain corporate wrongdoing?

In the first section, chapter authors wrestle with what it means for a corporation to have agency enough to commit a violation of law as well as what philosophies of punishment might apply when there is no body to jail. The second section focuses attention on the often unnamed, ambiguous, or even ignored victims of corporate crime. Many authors in this section take a broad view of “victimization,” speaking to the ways in which the intentional acts of corporations produce negative consequences for individuals and society at large through both the violation of law and the use of corporate power to produce laws that do not problematize corporate behavior. The third section turns to issues in corporate offending research, including the circumstances that beget offending, how corporations may be thought to have “life courses,” and the role of the State in structuring criminal opportunity. The editors wrap up the volume by proposing a framework for developing a more comprehensive system of criminal responsibility for corporate actors.

The chapters in this volume underscore the failures of the current system and are intended to inspire readers to push for change. This important work will be of interest to a wide range of criminologists and has potential to shape the future of corporate crime theory and research. It is ideal for use in graduate seminars and upper-level undergraduate courses.

Subjects:
Criminology
Contents:
Preface (editors)

Part I. Setting the Stage: Crime and Theories of the Firm
1. Moral Responsibility and Theories of the Firms
Eric Orts
2. Corporate Criminal Liability and the Purposes of Punishment
Robert Hughes
3. Some Reflections on the “Corporate Offender” in Criminal Law
William S. Laufer & Susana Aires de Sousa

Part II. Corporate Victimization
4. What Do We Owe Victims of Corporate Crime?
Mihailis Diamantis
5. Corporate Crime, Capture, and the Opioid Crisis
Miranda A. Galvin
6. Corporate Crime Victimization in the Gambling Industry
Melissa Rorie & Matthew West
7. Weaving webs of compliance: Integrating vertical and horizontal prevention of corporate involvement in human rights violations
Wim Huisman & Susanne Karstedt

Part III. Corporate Offending
8. Applying Opportunity Theory to Corporate Offending and Victimization
Michael L. Benson & Diana Sun
9. Corporate Wrongdoing and Shareholders
Vic Khanna
10. Patterns of Corporate Life Course Offending
Sally S. Simpson, Cristina Layana & Miranda A. Galvin
11. Structure, Agency, and the Role of the State in Corporate Crime: Negotiating Current and Contemporary Challenges to Human Safety
Kenneth Sebastian Leon

Afterword: Corporate Criminal Justice (editors)