Corruption
Factors Influencing Police Officers' Perception of Corruption: A Bosnian Perspective
Corruption Networks (From Policing in Central and Eastern Europe: Dilemmas of Contemporary Criminal Justice, P 595-605, 2004, Gorazd Mesko, et al., eds. -- See NCJ-207973)
The ties that bribe: Corruption's embeddedness in Chicago organized crime
Distinguishing Corruption in Law and Practice: Empirically Separating Conviction Charges From Underlying Behaviors
Distinguishing Corruption in Law and Practice: Empirically Separating Conviction Charges From Underlying Behaviors
Focusing Anti-Corruption Efforts More Effectively: An Empirical Look at Offender MotivationPositive, Classical, Structural and Ethical Approaches
Investigative Decision-making in Public Corruption Cases: Factors Influencing Case Outcomes
Distinguishing Corruption in Law and Practice: Empirically Separating Conviction Charges from Underlying Behaviors
Building Clean: The Control of Crime, Corruption, and Racketeering in the Public Construction Markets of New York City - A Preliminary Assessment of Efforts Made by the Office of the Inspector General, New York City School Construction Authority
Prorating Method for Estimating MMPI-2-RF Scores From MMPI Responses: Examination of Score Fidelity and Illustration of Empirical Utility in the PERSEREC Police Integrity Study Sample
Police Crime: The Criminal Behavior of Sworn Law Enforcement Officers
Developing Empirically-Driven Public Corruption Prevention Strategies
A Handful of Unlawful Behaviors, Led by Fraud and Bribery, Account for Nearly All Public Corruption Convictions Since 1985
Examining Police Officer Crime
White Collar Crime
The subprime mortgage industry collapse has led to a record number of foreclosures. In this environment, the interest mortgage fraud has risen, along with questions of how fraud contributed to the crisis. Henry Pontell and Sally Simpson discuss what they have learned about investigating and prosecuting white-collar criminals, the role of corporate ethics in America, and what policymakers and lawyers can learn from evidence of fraud.
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The State of the Police Field: A New Professionalism in Policing?
Panelists debate the premise of a Harvard Executive Session working paper that suggests police organizations are striving for a "new" professionalism. Leaders are endeavoring for stricter standards of efficiency and conduct, while also increasing their legitimacy to the public and encouraging innovation. Is this new? Will this idea lead to prematurely discarding community policing as a guiding philosophy?