Approaches to the Empirical Study of Convenience Theory for White-Collar Crime |
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Authors: | Petter Gottschalk |
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Affiliation: | Department of Leadership and Organizational Behavior, BI Norwegian Business School, Oslo, Norway |
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Abstract: | Convenience theory suggests that members of the elite in society commit financial crime in their professional roles when alternative actions require too much effort. Convenience is a relative concept where white-collar crime is chosen over legitimate actions when there is a strong economical motive, ample organizational opportunities, and acceptance of deviant behavior. To study convenience theory, four investigations are presented in this article: statistical sample of white-collar criminals, autobiographies by white-collar criminals, internal investigations of white-collar crime, and student elicitation on white-collar crime. The strongest relationship within convenience theory seems to be the effect from willingness to commit crime based on deviant behavior on organizational opportunity to commit white-collar crime. |
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