Collaring the Crime, not the Criminal: Reconsidering the Concept of White-Collar Crime

1990 American Sociological Review 395 citations

Abstract

The concept of white-collar crime, part of the sociological vocabulary for half a century, rests on a spurious correlation between role-specific norms and the characteristics of the occupants of these roles. In this paper, I strive to liberate the concept of white-collar crime by disentangling the identification of the perpetrators with their misdeeds. I suggest that white-collar criminals violate norms of trust, enabling them to rob without violence and burgle without trespass. I develop a conception of trust, expose the strategies by which wayward trustees establish and exploit trust, and demonstrate how the social organization of trust abuse confounds traditional systems of social control. Drawing on research on securities fraud, I debunk commonly-held understandings about the role of class bias in the legal system by showing that the leniency accorded white-collar criminals is due to the social organization of their misdeeds and the policing and punishment problems their crimes pose, rather than to their status. (abstract Adapted from Source: American Sociological Review, 1990. Copyright © 1990 by the American Sociological Association) White Collar Crime Adult Crime Adult Offender Crime Causes 10-99

Keywords

White-collar crimeCriminologyCollarWhite (mutation)SociologyBiologyEngineering

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Publication Info

Year
1990
Type
article
Volume
55
Issue
3
Pages
346-346
Citations
395
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Susan P. Shapiro (1990). Collaring the Crime, not the Criminal: Reconsidering the Concept of White-Collar Crime. American Sociological Review , 55 (3) , 346-346. https://doi.org/10.2307/2095761

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DOI
10.2307/2095761