State-Corporate Crime and Major Financial Institutions: Interrogating an Absence

The concept of state-corporate crime has been invoked and applied quite widely for more than 20 years now. We acknowledge the value of this concept but here address some of its conceptual limitations, especially in relation to crimes of large-scale investment and commercial banks, government-sponsor...

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Main Authors: David O. Friedrichs, Dawn L. Rothe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pluto Journals 2014-09-01
Series:State Crime
Online Access:https://www.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.13169/statecrime.3.2.0146
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author David O. Friedrichs
Dawn L. Rothe
author_facet David O. Friedrichs
Dawn L. Rothe
author_sort David O. Friedrichs
collection DOAJ
description The concept of state-corporate crime has been invoked and applied quite widely for more than 20 years now. We acknowledge the value of this concept but here address some of its conceptual limitations, especially in relation to crimes of large-scale investment and commercial banks, government-sponsored enterprises and international financial institutions. If the concept of state-corporate crime calls attention to the character and consequences of significant forms of crimes of the powerful, it tends to exclude attention to other forms of such crime. This article also addresses Steve Tombs' critique of state-corporate crime as it applies to what are here characterized as crimes of globalization. It considers the conundrum involved in a tension between achieving theoretical sophistication and in promoting effective responses to crimes of the powerful. It is a core premise of the analysis set forth here that in a rapidly changing, increasingly globalized twenty-first-century world, the forms of crime addressed here will necessarily attract more attention, especially relative to the traditional focus on conventional crime. A criminology that aspires to remain relevant in this environment must transform its understanding of crime.
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spelling doaj.art-27ceb95137a6491b9ec9acac66d0e9ca2023-05-03T16:17:52ZengPluto JournalsState Crime2046-60562046-60642014-09-013214616210.13169/statecrime.3.2.0146State-Corporate Crime and Major Financial Institutions: Interrogating an AbsenceDavid O. Friedrichs0Dawn L. Rothe1University of ScrantonOld Dominion UniversityThe concept of state-corporate crime has been invoked and applied quite widely for more than 20 years now. We acknowledge the value of this concept but here address some of its conceptual limitations, especially in relation to crimes of large-scale investment and commercial banks, government-sponsored enterprises and international financial institutions. If the concept of state-corporate crime calls attention to the character and consequences of significant forms of crimes of the powerful, it tends to exclude attention to other forms of such crime. This article also addresses Steve Tombs' critique of state-corporate crime as it applies to what are here characterized as crimes of globalization. It considers the conundrum involved in a tension between achieving theoretical sophistication and in promoting effective responses to crimes of the powerful. It is a core premise of the analysis set forth here that in a rapidly changing, increasingly globalized twenty-first-century world, the forms of crime addressed here will necessarily attract more attention, especially relative to the traditional focus on conventional crime. A criminology that aspires to remain relevant in this environment must transform its understanding of crime.https://www.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.13169/statecrime.3.2.0146
spellingShingle David O. Friedrichs
Dawn L. Rothe
State-Corporate Crime and Major Financial Institutions: Interrogating an Absence
State Crime
title State-Corporate Crime and Major Financial Institutions: Interrogating an Absence
title_full State-Corporate Crime and Major Financial Institutions: Interrogating an Absence
title_fullStr State-Corporate Crime and Major Financial Institutions: Interrogating an Absence
title_full_unstemmed State-Corporate Crime and Major Financial Institutions: Interrogating an Absence
title_short State-Corporate Crime and Major Financial Institutions: Interrogating an Absence
title_sort state corporate crime and major financial institutions interrogating an absence
url https://www.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.13169/statecrime.3.2.0146
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