Differentiate between occupational and corporate crime and discuss the impact of corporate crime on society

What will be an ideal response?


Occupational (white-collar) crime comprises illegal activities committed by people in the course of their employment or financial affairs. In addition to acting for their own financial benefit, some white-collar offenders become involved in criminal conspiracies designed to improve the market share or profitability of their companies. This is known as corporate crime—illegal acts committed by corporate employees on behalf of the corporation and with its support. Examples include antitrust violations; tax evasion; misrepresentations in advertising; infringements on patents, copyrights, and trademarks; price fixing; and financial fraud. These crimes are a result of deliberate decisions made by corporate personnel to enhance resources or profits at the expense of competitors, consumers, and the general public. Corporate crimes are often more costly in terms of money and lives lost than street crimes. Thousands of jobs and billions of dollars are lost each year due to corporate crimes. Deaths resulting from corporate crimes such as polluting the air and water and manufacturing defective products far exceed the number of deaths due to homicide each year.

Sociology

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In 2014, most terrorist attacks were in a. Africa

b. the Midde East. c. the U.S. d. Japan or Korea.

Sociology

In the classic University of Minnesota study of self-fulfilling prophecies in the physical attractiveness domain:

A) before the participants began talking, the experimenter gave each male subject fake information about the female participant's socioeconomic status. B) the female target with whom the subjects interacted was selected to be attractive or unattractive depending on the experimental condition. C) the male subjects thought they knew what the female target looked like but could not see her during the conversation. D) priming was used to create a physical attractiveness stereotype.

Sociology

Conservatives differ from liberals in that conservatives

A. argue that the government should encourage low-income men and women to marry in order to ease hardships of poverty. B. want a much broader and more costly set of supports to be provided to employed parents. C. are against tax credits that would assist all families with at least one worker. D. contend that government programs should focus on encouraging nonmarital births and same-sex marriages.

Sociology

Compare and contrast Cooley and Mead's theories on the development of self. Please include the "looking-glass self," the "I" and the "me," as well as the "generalized other" in your answer.

What will be an ideal response?

Sociology