1. Introducing The Corporate Criminal 2. Crime, Harm And The Corporation 3. Constructing The Corporation 4. The Corporation As Structured Irresponsibility 5. Controlling The Corporation? 6. Conclusion. What is to be done about the corporate criminal?
Steve Tombs is Professor of Sociology at Liverpool John Moores University. He has a long-standing interest in the incidence, nature and regulation of corporate crime, and in particular the regulation and management and health and safety at work. His most recent book is Safety Crimes, co-authored with Dave Whyte (2007). He co-edited, with Dave Gordon, Paddy Hillyard and Christina Pantazis, Beyond Criminology? Taking Harm Seriously (2004) and Criminal Obsessions (2005), as well as Unmasking the Crimes of the Powerful: scrutinising states and corporations, with Dave Whyte (2003). Dr David Whyte is Reader in Sociology at the University of Liverpool. His principle research interests are in the field of corporate crime and corporate power. He has published widely on subjects of corporate legal responsibility and accountability, with a particular interest in the use of legal mechanisms to improve corporate accountability. He is a long standing board member of the London-based human rights charity, the Centre for Corporate Accountability. In 2005 he was appointed by the Scottish Justice Minister to the Scottish Government Expert Group on Corporate Homicide. His most recent books are Safety Crimes (2007, co-authored with Steve Tombs) and Crimes of the Powerful: a reader (2008). His article on corporate crime and the rule of law in Iraq won the 2007 British Journal of Criminology Leon Radzinowitz Memorial Prize.
Few academic books demand the kind of critical attention that The
Corporate Criminal demands.
This is surely the most powerful and compelling critique of the
corporation ever written. Tombs and Whyte pull no punches in this
arrestingly accessible but scholarly book. Their argument is simple
– its legal and historical construction is such that the resulting
corporation is endemically criminogenic and thus beyond reform.
Their conclusion is utterly persuasive, ‘the goal of corporate
opposition must be the abolition of the corporation’ - Penny Green
is Professor of Law and Globalisation and Director of the
International State Crime Initiative at Queen Mary University of
London, UKTombs and Whyte provide a brilliant, unflinching and
original account of corporate power in neoliberal capitalism. Their
careful analysis – rich in both empirical and theoretical insights
- convincingly reveals that corporations cannot balance economic
progress with social welfare, but also that the only effective
corrective is to disassemble the corporate form. This superb book
is a must read for anyone wishing to understand how and why
corporations have come to define and destroy our daily lives, and
what do about it. – Susanne Soederberg, Queen’s University, Canada
It is clear that today, everyone is aware of the devastating
effects of corporate capitalism on the environment, global
inequality, and various other aspects of our societies and daily
lives. What is utterly refreshing about Tombs and Whyte’s book, is
the realisation that none of these effects can be mitigated by
legal reform or neoliberal regimes such as ‘corporate social
responsibility’. What is needed is a revolution in our thinking
about, and action towards, corporate capitalism, and Tombs and
Whyte’s call to ‘bring down the corporation’ deserves to be carried
far and wide. - Grietje Baars, The City Law School, City University
London.This book offers readers a provocative brief for the case
that corporations are in fact not a sustainable enterprise, and
that their inherently criminal and criminogenic nature must be
fully recognized.— David O. Friedrichs, Criminal Law and Criminal
Justice Books (Rutgers University)
Ask a Question About this Product More... |