Show Summary Details
- Title Pages
- List of Tables
- Notes on Contributors
-
1 Introduction: In Pursuit of a European Dialogue on White-Collar and Corporate Crimes -
2 Using Grid-Group Cultural Theory to Assess Approaches to the Prevention of Corporate and Occupational Crime: The EU as a Natural Experiment -
3 How to Prioritize White-Collar Crime Research in the European Union in Relation to Internal and External Security -
4 Corruption and Comparative Analyses across Europe: Developing New Research Traditions -
5 Identifying ‘Europeanness’ in European White-Collar Crime: The Case Study of Criminal Responses to ‘Market Abuse’ -
6 Anti-Money Laundering and the Legal Profession in Europe: Between Global and Local -
7 Responding to Money Laundering across Europe: What We Know and What We Risk -
8 Food Production Harms in the European Context: The EU as an Enabler or a Solution? -
9 Understanding the Dynamics of White-Collar Criminality in Ukraine -
10 Labour Exploitation and Posted Workers in the European Construction Industry -
11 Struggles in Cooperation: Public–Private Relations in the Investigation of Internal Financial Crime in the Netherlands -
12 Cartel Cases: From State Negligence to Direct Political Interest in Hungary -
13 Silencing Those Who Speak Up against Corporate Power: Strategic Lawsuits against Public Participation (SLAPPs) in Europe -
14 Same Difference? Reflections on the Comparative Method in White-Collar Crime Research in Ireland and the United States -
15 Settling with Corporations in Europe: A Sign of Legal Convergence? -
16 Observations on European White-Collar Crime Scholarship from the United States -
17 What Is ‘European’ about White-Collar Crime in Europe? Perspectives from the Global South -
18 Learning (Multiple) Lessons from Europe: Criminological Scholarship on White-Collar Crime - Index
(p.vi) List of Tables
(p.vi) List of Tables
- Source:
- European White-Collar Crime
- Author(s):
- Nicholas Lord, Éva Inzelt, Wim Huisman, Rita Faria
- Publisher:
- Policy Press
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- Title Pages
- List of Tables
- Notes on Contributors
-
1 Introduction: In Pursuit of a European Dialogue on White-Collar and Corporate Crimes -
2 Using Grid-Group Cultural Theory to Assess Approaches to the Prevention of Corporate and Occupational Crime: The EU as a Natural Experiment -
3 How to Prioritize White-Collar Crime Research in the European Union in Relation to Internal and External Security -
4 Corruption and Comparative Analyses across Europe: Developing New Research Traditions -
5 Identifying ‘Europeanness’ in European White-Collar Crime: The Case Study of Criminal Responses to ‘Market Abuse’ -
6 Anti-Money Laundering and the Legal Profession in Europe: Between Global and Local -
7 Responding to Money Laundering across Europe: What We Know and What We Risk -
8 Food Production Harms in the European Context: The EU as an Enabler or a Solution? -
9 Understanding the Dynamics of White-Collar Criminality in Ukraine -
10 Labour Exploitation and Posted Workers in the European Construction Industry -
11 Struggles in Cooperation: Public–Private Relations in the Investigation of Internal Financial Crime in the Netherlands -
12 Cartel Cases: From State Negligence to Direct Political Interest in Hungary -
13 Silencing Those Who Speak Up against Corporate Power: Strategic Lawsuits against Public Participation (SLAPPs) in Europe -
14 Same Difference? Reflections on the Comparative Method in White-Collar Crime Research in Ireland and the United States -
15 Settling with Corporations in Europe: A Sign of Legal Convergence? -
16 Observations on European White-Collar Crime Scholarship from the United States -
17 What Is ‘European’ about White-Collar Crime in Europe? Perspectives from the Global South -
18 Learning (Multiple) Lessons from Europe: Criminological Scholarship on White-Collar Crime - Index