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2021/2022

White-Collar Crime

Code: 100470 ECTS Credits: 6
Degree Type Year Semester
2500257 Criminology OB 3 1
The proposed teaching and assessment methodology that appear in the guide may be subject to changes as a result of the restrictions to face-to-face class attendance imposed by the health authorities.

Contact

Name:
Daniela Gaddi
Email:
Daniela.Gaddi@uab.cat

Use of Languages

Principal working language:
spanish (spa)
Some groups entirely in English:
No
Some groups entirely in Catalan:
No
Some groups entirely in Spanish:
Yes

Other comments on languages

Lectures and seminars will be held in Spanish

Teachers

Maria Jose Rodriguez Puerta

Prerequisites

There are no prerequisites for this course.

Objectives and Contextualisation

This course aims to provide students with introductory information on different aspects of White Collar Crime (WCC).
 
The objectives of the course are:
  1. To familiarize students with the problems concerning the delimitation and conceptualization of this kind of criminality
  2. To enable students to carry out a criminological research on crimes that can be categorized as WCC.
  3. To familiarize students with strategies for preventing WCC.
  4. To make students able to identify the specific elements of the more relevant white collar crimes.
  5. To provide students with tools for prevention and intervention in white collar crimes.

Competences

  • Ability to analyse and summarise.
  • Accessing and interpreting sources of crime data.
  • Analysing the conflict and criminology by using the criminological theories and their psychological and sociological foundations.
  • Designing a criminological research and identifying the appropriate methodological strategy to the proposed goals.
  • Drawing up an academic text.
  • Formulating research hypothesis in the criminological field.
  • Identifying existing social resources to intervene in the conflict and criminality.
  • Respectfully interacting with other people.
  • Students must demonstrate a comprehension of the best crime prevention and intervention models for each specific problem.
  • Students must demonstrate they comprehend the criminological theories.
  • Students must demonstrate they know a variety of criminal policies in order to face criminality and its different foundations.
  • Using the evaluation techniques of criminogenic risk and needs of a person in order to decide an intervention proposal.
  • Verbally transmitting ideas to an audience.
  • Working autonomously.
  • Working in teams and networking.

Learning Outcomes

  1. Ability to analyse and summarise.
  2. Accurately applying the prevention models in specific crime situations.
  3. Analysing with scientific criteria the information obtained in criminological databases.
  4. Applying the criminological theories.
  5. Applying the scientific criminological knowledge to the delinquency analysis.
  6. Appropriately choosing the social resource for each professional intervention case.
  7. Correctly drawing up every part of a criminological research project.
  8. Drawing up an academic text.
  9. Efficiently applying the foundations of the different crime policies in the professional activity.
  10. Inferring the intervention models in accordance with a previous needs assessment.
  11. Respectfully interacting with other people.
  12. Using the appropriate research methodology in accordance with the suggested criminological research.
  13. Verbally transmitting ideas to an audience.
  14. Working autonomously.
  15. Working in teams and networking.

Content

Introduction: White-Collar Crime: general issues

Part 1

Topic 1: White-Collar Crime: legal and criminological approach
Topic 2: Criminological profile of authors and victims of White-Collar Crime
Topic 3: Corporate crime. The responsibility of companies, from a criminological and legal perspective
Topic 4: Corruption. Legal and criminological perspective. Corruption in Spain. Corruption related crimes

Part 2

Topic 5: Corporate Crime prevention policies. Compliance programs in both the private and public sector. The role of criminologists
Topic 6: Investigation and prosecution of White-Collar Crimes
Topic 7: Criminal justice response: Sanctions and post-sentence phase (individuals and corporations)
Topic 8: Restorative justice response: Harms and diffuse, collective and shared victimization. Restorative agreements: basis and characteristics

Methodology

Activities

  • Lectures, with the whole group. The professor, following an interactive methodology, will explain the main issues, stimulate reflection and propose activities
  • Workshops/Seminars,  in which data and case studies will be analyzed. Seminars will use an active methodology to improve the learning of  the contents of the course. Some of the workshops will be specifically devoted to work on compulsory readings in a shared and creative way.
Students will also attend presentations given by experts in the field, which will give them an insight into practical aspects of white-collar crime

Annotation: Within the schedule set by the centre or degree programme, 15 minutes of one class will be reserved for students to evaluate their lecturers and their courses or modules through questionnaires.

Activities

Title Hours ECTS Learning Outcomes
Type: Directed      
Lectures 19.5 0.78 2, 5, 4, 10, 11, 14
Workshops 19.5 0.78 2, 5, 4, 10, 11, 13, 14, 15
Type: Autonomous      
Individual and group work 106 4.24 3, 2, 9, 5, 4, 10, 8, 1, 13, 14, 15

Assessment

Attendance to lectures and workshops is compulsory. Therefore, a student who does not attend at least 80% of the classes will not be assessed. Absences will be allowed only in case of medical reasons or exceptional circumstances. An absence note will be required. Any academic reason for non attendance should be previously authorized by the professor. Attendance will be supervised in both lectures and workshops. 

Evaluation. Students will be assessed according to the following items:

1) Continuous evaluation

  • One assessment activity will check the students’ understanding and knowledge of bibliographic and lectures material and will consist in drawing up a paper (group work, 30% of the final mark)
  • One assessment activity will check the students' ability to apply understanding and knowledge and will consist on designing a project (group work, 30% of the final mark).

2) Final exam:

  • The final test will check the students’ understanding and knowledge of all course's contents and will consist of a multiple choice exam (40% of the final mark).

Each activity will be graded on a scale from 1 to 10. In order to pass the course, students will need to obtain an average of 5 or above for any of the evaluated activities. Students who do not obtain the minimum mark will be able to resit for that activity during the reassessment period.

Active participation: Students who demonstrate through active participation that they have achieved an above averagemastery of the course material and objectives will be rewarded with an increase ofthe final mark of up to 0,5 extra points.

Punctuality. Classes start on time. Late arrival is not admitted.

Cheating at any evaluation activity will imply a fail mark (0) and students will lose the right to a new assessment. Plagiarism will lead to a fail mark (0) and to a warning. In the case of reoccurrence, the student will be given a fail mark (0) and will lose the right to resit.

Assessment Activities

Title Weighting Hours ECTS Learning Outcomes
Final test (individual) 40% 5 0.2 5, 4, 11, 1, 14
Group work 1 (paper) 30% 0 0 3, 2, 5, 4, 6, 7, 8, 11, 1, 13, 14, 15
Group work 2 (project) 30% 0 0 3, 2, 9, 5, 4, 6, 10, 7, 8, 11, 1, 13, 15, 12

Bibliography

MANDATORY READINGS

Topic 1: White-Collar Crime: legal and criminological approach

  • Class material
  • Friedrichs, D.O. (2020). White Collar Crime: Definitional Debates and the Case for a Typological Approach. In Melissa L. Roerie (Ed.). The Handbook of WhiteCollar Crime (pp. 16-31). Wiley-Blackwell. Only pp. 21-28

Topic 2: Criminological profile of authors and victims of White-Collar Crime

  • Class material

  • Benson, M.L., Hei Lam Chio (2020). Who Commits Occupational Crimes?. In Melissa L. Roerie (Ed.). The Handbook of WhiteCollar Crime (pp. 97-112). Wiley-Blackwell. Only pp. 101-110

Topic 3: Corporate crime. The responsibility of companies, from a criminological and legal perspective

  • Cigüela-Sola, J. (2019). Compliance más allá de la ciencia penal. Aportaciones de la sociología de las organizaciones al análisis de la criminalidad corporativa y de la imputación jurídico-penal, InDret, 2, 1-36. Retrieved from: https://indret.com/compliance-mas-alla-de-la-ciencia-penal
  • Silva, J.M., Varela, Lorena (2016). Responsabilidades individuales en estructuras de empresa. La influencia de sesgos cognitivos y dinámicas de grupo. In J.M. Silva (Dir.). Fundamentos del derecho penal de la empresa (pp. 247-284). Edisofer
  • Dopico, J. (2018). La responsabilidad penal de las personas jurídicas. In G. Quintero-Olivares, et al. (Dirs.). Esquemas de  teoría jurídica del delito y de la pena (pp. 287-301). Tirant Lo Blanch

Topic 4: Corruption. Legal and criminological perspective. Corruption in Spain. Corruption related crimes

  • Class material
  • Villoria, M. (2015). La corrupción en España: rasgos y causas esenciales. Cahiers de civilisation espagnole contemporaine, 15 (15), 1-17. Retrieved from: http://ccec.revues.org/5949

Topic 5: Corporate Crime prevention policies. Compliance programs in both the private and public sector. The role of criminologists

  • Class material
  • León-Alapont, J. (2021). Los programas de cumplimiento penal: aspectos generales. Revista Boliviana de Derecho, 31, 354-389. Retrieved from: https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/articulo?codigo=7730062

Topic 6: Investigation and prosecution of White-Collar Crimes

  • Class material
  • Conference by an external expert

Topic 7: Criminal justice response: Sanctions and post-sentence phase (individuals and corporations)

  • Class material
  • Dopico, J. (2018). La responsabilidad penal de las personas jurídicas. In G. Quintero-Olivares, et al. (Dirs.). Esquemas de teoría jurídica del delito y de la pena (pp. 287-301). Tirant Lo Blanch

Topic 8: Restorative justice response: Harms and diffuse, collective and shared victimization. Restorative agreements: basis and characteristics

  • Class material
  • Aertsen, I. (2018). Restorative Justice for Victims of Corporate Violence. In G. Forti, C. Mazzucato, A. Visconti & S. Giavazzi (Eds.). Victims and Corporations. Legal Challenges and Empirical Findings (pp. 235-258). Wolters Kluwer

 RECOMMENDED READINGS

  • Baucells, J. (2012). Sistemas de penas para el delincuente económico. Cuadernos de Política Criminal, 107 (2), 143-182
  • Cid, J., Larrauri, Elena. (2001). Teorías criminológicas: explicación y prevención de la delincuencia. Bosch.
  • Jimenez, F. (2016). Las hojas y el rábano: tres errores en el combate de la corrupción, Claves de Razón Práctica, 246, 9-21
  • Levi, M. (2010). Serious tax fraud and noncompliance. A review of evidence on the differential impact of criminal and noncriminal proceedings. Criminology & Public Policy, 9(3), 493-513.  https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1745-9133.2010.00645.x
  • Levi, M., Horlick-Jones, T. E. (2013). Interpreting the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear incident: some questions for corporate criminology. Crime, Law and Social Change 59(5), pp. 487-500. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10611-013-9432-3
  • Morón, Esther (2014). El perfil criminológico del delincuente económico. In Mercedes García-Aran (Dir.). La delincuencia económica. Prevenir y sancionar (pp. 29-52). Tirant Lo Blanch
  • Rebollo, R., Casas, J. (2013). Reflexiones, problemas y propuestas para la investigación de la delincuencia económica. Revista General de Derecho Penal, 19. Retrieved from https://www.iustel.com//v2/revistas/detalle_revista.asp?id_noticia=413154&d=1
  • Simpson, Sally S. (2019). Reimagining Sutherland 80yearsafter white-collar crime. Criminology, 57 (2), 189-207. https://doi.org/10.1111/1745-9125.12206
  • Villoria, M. (2015). La corrupción en España: rasgos y causas esenciales. Cahiers de civilisation espagnole contemporaine, 15 (15), 1-17. Retrieved from: http://ccec.revues.org/5949

 OTHER USEFUL READINGS

  • Benson, M. L., Simpson, Sally S. (2018). White-Collar Crime: An Opportunity Perspective. Routledge
  • De la Mata-Barranco, N. J., Dopico-Gómez-Aller, J., Lascuraín-Sánchez, J. A., Nieto-Martín, A. (2018). Derecho penal económico y de la empresa. Dyckinson.
  • García-Arán, Mercedes (Dir.) (2014). La delincuencia económica: prevenir y sancionar. Tirant Lo Blanch
  • Gottschalk, P. (2017). Organizational Opportunity and Deviant Behaviour: Convenience in White-collar Crime. Edward Elgar Publishing
  • Lynch, M., Barrett, K., Stretesky, P., Long, M. (2016). The Weak Probability of Punishment for Environmental Offenses and Deterrence of Environmental Offenders: A Discussion Based on USEPA Criminal Cases, 1983–2013. Deviant Behavior, 37 (10), 1095-1109. https://doi.org/10.1080/01639625.2016.1161455
  • Muñoz-Conde, F. (2016). Derecho penal. Parte especial. Tirant Lo Blanch
  • Payne, B.K. (2013). The Corrections Subsystem and White-Collar Crime. In B.K Payne, White collar crimes. The Essentials (pp. 364-393). Sage
  • Pearce F., Tombs, S. (1992). Realism and corporate crimes. In R. Matthews & J. Young (Eds.). Issues in Realist Criminology (pp. 70-101). Sage
  • Villoria, M., Jiménez, F. (2012), La corrupción en España, Revista Española de Investigaciones Sociológicas, 138, 109-134. https://doi.org/10.5477/cis/reis.138.109

 

 Note: Any possible update in the bibliography will be communicated through the Moodle

Software

Basic software (MS Office tools)