Fraud and Corruption in U.S. Nonprofit Entities: A Summary of Press Reports 2008-2011

The charitable sector is vulnerable to fraud losses, with these losses negatively impacting the organization’s reputation, future funding, and ability to advance its mission. Research on nonprofit fraud is relatively scarce, due mainly to limited availability of data. We create a database that summa...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nonprofit and voluntary sector quarterly 2015-12, Vol.44 (6), p.1194-1224
Hauptverfasser: Archambeault, Deborah S., Webber, Sarah, Greenlee, Janet
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creator Archambeault, Deborah S.
Webber, Sarah
Greenlee, Janet
description The charitable sector is vulnerable to fraud losses, with these losses negatively impacting the organization’s reputation, future funding, and ability to advance its mission. Research on nonprofit fraud is relatively scarce, due mainly to limited availability of data. We create a database that summarizes and describes basic facts (nature and timing of fraud, description of organization, magnitude of loss, and perpetrators) for 115 incidents of detected fraud occurring in U.S. nonprofit organizations. We find a disproportionately high incidence of nonprofit fraud in the Health and Human Services National Taxonomy of Exempt Entities Groups, a high percentage of females committing misappropriation frauds, and that the organizational role of the perpetrator is related to the size of the fraud loss. We also investigate whether organizations detecting a nonprofit fraud report this information, as required, on Internal Revenue Service Form 990, and find that many organizations do not comply.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); SAGE Complete A-Z List; HeinOnline Law Journal Library; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Classification
Corruption
Financing
Fraud
Income
Losses
Noncompliance
Nonprofit organizations
Perpetrators
Reputations
Social services
Studies
Tax exempt organizations
Timing
title Fraud and Corruption in U.S. Nonprofit Entities: A Summary of Press Reports 2008-2011
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