lesson 13: street crime and white collar crime and the prison industrial complex social problems...
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Lesson 13: Street Crime and White Collar Crime and the Prison Industrial Complex
Social ProblemsRobert Wonser
Blue-collar Crimes - Traditional common law theft crimes such as larceny, burglary, and arson.
White-collar Crimes - Crimes of business enterprise such as embezzlement, price fixing, and bribery.
Green-collar Crimes - Crimes that affect the environment.
Types of Economic Crimes
Business frauds and swindles Ponzi schemes – An
investment fraud that involves the payment of purported returns to existing investors from funds contributed by new investors.
White-Collar Crimes
The OG Ponzi, Charles Ponzi, 1929
Bernie Madoff, 2009
Influence peddling - Using one's institutional position to grant favors and sell information to which one's co-conspirators are not entitled. Influence peddling in government Influence peddling in criminal justice Influence peddling in business
White-Collar Crimes
Embezzlement - A type of larceny in which someone who is trusted with property fraudulently converts it to his or her own use or for the use of others.
Client fraudHealth care fraudTax evasion
White-Collar Crimes
Corporate (organizational) crime - Powerful institutions or their representatives willfully violate the laws that restrain these institutions from doing social harm or require them to do social good.
White-Collar Crimes
Rationalization/Neutralization View
Cultural View
Self-Control View
Theories of White-Collar and Green-Collar Crimes
Discuss which of the criminological theories fits best for green-collar criminals.
Rational Choice Greed Need
Cultural
Self-Control
Others?
Class Discussion/Activity
Deterrence versus Compliance Compliance strategies: Methods of
controlling white-collar crime that rely on the threat of economic sanctions or civil penalties to control potential violators.
Deterrence strategies: Methods of controlling white-collar crime that rely on punishment to deter would-be violators.
Controlling White-Collar and Green-Collar Crime
The Prison Industrial Complex
The term prison–industrial complex (PIC) is used to attribute the rapid expansion of the US inmate population to the political influence of private prison companies and businesses that supply goods and services to government prison agencies.
Paid between 93¢ and $4.73 per day, and collecting no benefits, prisoners are a cheap labor source for about 100 companies (source).
If you’ve bought products by or from Starbucks, Nintendo, Victoria’s Secret, JC Penney, Sears, Wal-Mart, K-Mart, Eddie Bauer, Wendy’s, Proctor & Gamble, Johnson & Johnson, Fruit of the Loom, Motorola, Caterpiller, Sara Lee, Quaker Oats, Mary Kay, or Microsoft, you are part of this system.
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When prisoners are in state and federal prisons, the U.S. taxpayer is subsidizing low wages and corporate profits, since they are paying for prisoners’ room, board, and health care.
When prisoners are in private prisons, prison labor is a way to make more money off of the human beings caught in the corrections industry.
In other words, prison labor is an efficient way for corporations to continue to increase their profits without sharing those gains with their employees.
Prison Labor is Cheap
Angela Davis on PIC