<SOURCE TABLE="Criminology:Arts::v3.42">
<SUBJECT ID="191-317" CODEUSED="191-317/417">
<TITLE>CORPORATE AND WHITE-COLLAR CRIME</TITLE>
<POINTS>16.7 3rd and 4th years
<COORDINATOR>Dr K Polk.
<PREREQUISITES>3rd year: Any two second year level Criminology subjects; 4th year: Admission to Criminology Honours.
<SEMESTER>Second semester
<CONTACT>A 1-hour lecture and a 2-hour seminar.
<OBJECTIVES>Students completing this subject should:
<ul>
<li>have an understanding of the problems of definition of the various forms of business, occupation or corporate criminality.
<li>have an appreciation of the importance of corporate criminality in the context of social life of the community.
<li>have an understanding of the forms of individual business or occupational crime, including such forms of financial crime as insider trading.
<li>have learned some of the problems which concern the regulation of white collar crime, including the features of law which cause particular problems in the control of corporate misconduct.
</ul>
<CONTENT>Individual and organisational forms of white collar or corporate crime found in both the public and private sectors.
<ASSESSMENT>Up to 5,000 words of written work at 3rd year level and 6,000 words at 4th year level. An examination may be substituted for part of the written work.
</SUBJECT>
</SOURCE>

<XREF TABLE="Sociology:Arts:CODEAS191-317:v3.168">
<SUBJECT ID="191-317" CODEUSED="191-317">
<TITLE>CORPORATE AND WHITE-COLLAR CRIME</TITLE>
<POINTS>16.7 3rd year
<COORDINATOR>Dr K Polk.
<PREREQUISITES>Normally, 25 points of first-year Sociology.
<SEMESTER>Second semester
<CONTACT>A 1-hour lecture and a 90-minute seminar.
<OBJECTIVES>Students completing this subject should:
<ul>
<li>have an understanding of the problems of definition of the various forms of business, occupation or corporate criminality; p
<li>have an appreciation of the importance of corporate criminality in the context of social life of the community;
<li>have an understanding of the forms of individual business or occupational crime, including such forms of financial crime as insider trading;
<li>have learned some of the problems which concern the regulation of white collar crime, including the features of law which cause particular problems in the control of corporate misconduct.
</ul>
<CONTENT>Individual and organisational forms of white collar or corporate crime found in both the public and private sectors.
<ASSESSMENT>Up to 5,000 words of written work. An examination may be substituted for part of the written work.
</SUBJECT>
</XREF>


