Black Mist and White Collars: Economic Crime in the United States and Japan |
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Authors: | Henry N. Pontell Gilbert Geis |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Criminology, Law and Society, University of California, Irvine, CA 92697, USA |
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Abstract: | Comparative studies of crime have persistently challenged and daunted criminology scholars. For criminologists studying Japan, interest has traditionally been focused on the country’s much-heralded low crime rate. The current study examines white-collar lawbreaking in both the United States and Japan, focusing on similarities and differences in culture, law, criminal justice system response, corporate governance, and regulation. The study concludes that if Japan’s low crime rate is an enigma to criminologists, then its ample amounts of white-collar and corporate crime appear that much more puzzling. Given that the depth of the problem of white-collar crime goes far beyond adjudicated cases, Japan’s remarkably low rate of common crime is likely eclipsed by its rate of white-collar and corporate crime. The study concludes that the different legal and cultural contexts of the “law in inaction” go far in explaining the official nonrecognition of white-collar and corporate crime in both the United States and Japan. |
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Keywords: | Crime Culture Japan Comparative Economic crime White-collar crime Corporate crime |
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