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The Fluid Nature Of White Collar Crime

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The nebulous nature of white-collar crime has long been explored, defined and redefined throughout its history by a great number of people specialising in a variety of fields. Despite being first introduced by Edwin Sutherland in 1939, some 78 years prior to today, the problem remains: how should white-collar crime be defined? The fluid nature of white-collar crime itself does not easily lend itself to be defined and thus there exists no universally-accepted definition despite the numerous attempts to accomplish the feat. Typically, the definition of a criminal offence is determined according to very specific criteria: the characteristics of the crime itself, with the characteristics of the offender remaining irrespective. However, many, tend …show more content…

’Whilst there remains a discrete set of offences which can readily be defined as white-collar crime, the offender characteristics remain ever-changing, changing as a result of both technological advancements and societal developments changes. Traditionally, very few individuals had the means, access and ability to commit white-collar crime, with the world’s majority not having real access to corporate information. Compare that to today, over 61% of the total workforce now has the potential to access the targets of white-collar crimes from employment in business sectors such as management, professional, sales and office professions. In addition, with today’s current access to corporate information, white-collar offenders no longer required to be employed in a white-collar occupation to commit their crimes. White-collar offences can occur within the comfort of the offenders own home. The United States Department of Justice states white-collar crime is “committed by anyone having special technical and professional knowledge of business and government, irrespective of the person’s occupation.” Widespread access to the internet as well as advancements in information technologies and communication has allowed white-collar crimes to be committed with increasing ease. In addition, these technological advancements have become increasingly common across diverse social strata with the cost of these technologies …show more content…

Today there remains no universally accepted definition of white-collar crime, and so long as inclusion of the offender continues this will not change. Discussion of white-collar crime is flawed and biased due to an age-old definition derived in a time before cell phones. High social status and respectability does not waver consequences for serious crimes. It is time to treat white-collar crime as any other crime and remove the concept of the handsome banker in suit and tie from the equation. Why include the offender at all? White-collar crimes are committed irrespective of social factors, causing significant difficulty when attempting to define white-collar crime based on offender characteristics. Are we, by including offender characteristics limiting the scope of the crime itself to that defined nearly a century ago, and, are we, by introducing class specifications creating an institutionalised bias that allows these criminals to walk free? Should white-collar crime be defined according to offender or offence? The answer is

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