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From Crime Convenience to Punishment Inconvenience: The Case of Detected White-Collar Offenders

Gottschalk, Petter
Journal article, Peer reviewed
Accepted version
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Available from 2021-06-18 (494.5Kb)
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2637335
Date
2020
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  • Publikasjoner fra CRIStin - BI [1180]
  • Scientific articles [2322]
Original version
Deviant Behavior. 2020, 1-11.   10.1080/01639625.2020.1717840
Abstract
The theory of convenience suggests that white-collar offenders find it convenient to use illegitimate gain to explore possibilities and avoid threats. Furthermore, there is convenient access to resources to commit and financial crime, and offenders can conveniently justify crime and neutralize guilt feelings. This article extends the concept of convenience into the concept of inconvenience when white-collar offenders face detection, investigation, conviction, and incarceration. The extent of inconvenience is dependent on a number of issues such as public opinion about seriousness of wrongdoing, fraud examinations versus police investigations, symbolic defense by attorneys, and the special sensitivity hypothesis versus the special resilience hypothesis. While facing the criminal justice system is never convenient for the offender, the extent of inconvenience might limit itself and partly find compensation by a number of circumstances on the way from crime detection to release from prison.
Publisher
Taylor and Francis
Journal
Deviant Behavior
Copyright
Copyright policy of Taylor & Francis, the publisher of this journal: 'Green' Open Access = deposit of the Accepted Manuscript (after peer review but prior to publisher formatting) in a repository, with non-commercial reuse rights, with an Embargo period from date of publication of the final article. The embargo period for journals within the Social Sciences and the Humanities (SSH) is usually 18 months

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