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Public support for punishing white-collar crime: Blaming the victim revisited?
Authors:Francis T. Cullen  Gregory A. Clark  Richard A. Mathers  John B. Cullen
Affiliation:Criminal Justice Program University of Cincinnati Cincinnati, Ohio 45221, USA;Criminal Justice Center Sam Houston State University Huntsville, Texas 77341, USA;Department of Sociology and Anthropology Western Illinois University Macomb, Illinois 61455, USA;Department of Management University of Nebraska—Lincoln Lincoln, Nebraska 68588, USA
Abstract:It is commonly asserted that white-collar crime flourishes because the public is unaware of its costs and indifferent to its control. Survey data collected in Illinois indicate, however, that the public perceives white-collar offenses to have greater economic and moral costs than conventional street crimes, though not to be as violent. More notably, our sample displayed strong support for the criminal sanctioning of white-collar offenders. Public attitudes thus do not appear to be either a major obstacle to attacking upper-world criminality, or its source. It is suggested that attempts to blame the public for its immense victimization serve only to divert attention from the real structural conditions that underlie both high rates of white-collar crime and the reluctance of the state to bring the lawlessness of the advantaged within the reach of the criminal law.
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