White-Collar Offenses in the Wholesale Meat Industry in Detroit

Criminological theory is deficient because a large category of known criminal offenses is excluded from study, namely, those offenses committed for a firm by the firm or its agents in the conduct of its business. Violations of Office of Price Administration regulations are criminal offenses, even th...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of sociology 1950-07, Vol.56 (1), p.25-34
1. Verfasser: Hartung, F E
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description Criminological theory is deficient because a large category of known criminal offenses is excluded from study, namely, those offenses committed for a firm by the firm or its agents in the conduct of its business. Violations of Office of Price Administration regulations are criminal offenses, even though they may have been handled in civil proceedings, because "civil" and "criminal" sanctions are not analytically distinguishable. Wilfulness is not essential to the offenses under consideration. Other persons are necessarily directly party to the commission of these offenses, which makes them of greater importance to the community than the usual offenses involving larceny.
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1537-5390
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source PAIS Index; Jstor Complete Legacy
subjects Business
Criminal law
Criminal offenses
Criminal sanctions
Criminals
Criminology
Industrial regulation
Meat industry
Meats
Prisons
Regulation
White collar crimes
Wholesale trade
title White-Collar Offenses in the Wholesale Meat Industry in Detroit
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