CRIM 3652 Lecture Notes - Lecture 1: Corporate Crime, Criticism Of Wikipedia
Document Summary
Police tend to be a locus of power in society. * b(cid:724)(cid:722)(cid:720)(cid:740)(cid:738)(cid:724) (cid:728)(cid:725) w(cid:724) (cid:723)(cid:734)(cid:733)"(cid:739) (cid:721)(cid:724)(cid:722)(cid:734)(cid:732)(cid:724) (cid:720)(cid:733)(cid:720)(cid:731)(cid:744)(cid:739)(cid:728)(cid:722)(cid:720)(cid:731) (cid:734)(cid:725) (cid:739)(cid:727)(cid:724)(cid:738)(cid:724) (cid:722)(cid:737)(cid:728)(cid:732)(cid:724)(cid:738) (cid:739)(cid:727)(cid:724)(cid:733) (cid:733)(cid:734)(cid:739)(cid:727)(cid:728)(cid:733)(cid:726) will change. * they own the means of production and have the tools needed to manipulate the story. * legal mechanisms the put in place to protect themselves, * corporoates have a unique set of construction, they are legally constructed as a person, they have all the rights of a person. * crimes committed by the state and corporations have a far great economic, physical damage than the traditional crimes of society. The crimes of the powerful are far more costly, examples: corporate crimes cause more victims than the regular street crime. Rather than just one victim there are multiple victims left in debt, jobless. These committed by states and corporations have greater economic, physical and social costs than conventional criminals. White-collar crime is more serious than street gang crimes.