VELIKE FINANSIJSKE PREVARE NA VOLSTRITU
FINANCIALLY RESPECTABLE CRIMES OF WALL STREET
Author(s): Gregg BarakContributor(s): Vanja Bajović (Translator)
Subject(s): Criminal Law, Criminology, Law on Economics, Financial Markets
Published by: Правни факултет Универзитета у Београду
Keywords: financial crimes; Wall Street; social control; security fraud;
Summary/Abstract: In criminological and socio-legal circles alike, the absence of law or social control as an explanation for a variety of crimes has a long tradition. At the same time, sociologists and psychologists have used social control for more than a century to explain the conduct of people in organizations, neighborhoods, public spaces, and face-to-face encounters. These characteristics of the behavior of law and of social control beg a couple of related questions: “how far will agents of law enforcement and/or academia go to ‘whitewash’ the financial crimes of Wall Street in order to protect those fraud minimalist reputations of some of the most ‘successful’ bankers in the world?” and “when it comes to financial securities control who exactly is regulating whom?” The problem of controlling securities fraud goes far beyond revolving personnel doors that are not really conflicts of interests per se. In the United States, the noncontrol of high stakes securities fraud or the lack of state-legal criminalization of security fraud has a very rich tradition. Throughout U.S. history the illegal use of public money by economic and political elites for personal gain without any penal sanctions has been the most common sanction, if and when, the state decides to intervene. State-legal criminalization of security fraud hangs in the balance of the contradictory forces of free-market capitalism. Like the omissions from civic discourse (pragmatically, this has occurred through the differential application and selective enforcement of civil, criminal, and regulatory law, cognitively, this occurs through the cultural and social denial of the mass victimization of the American people and the corresponding lack of moral accountability for those responsible) there has also been a general capitulation in academic studies of law, crime, and society. According to Black there are four styles of law or governmental social control: (1) penal, (2) compensatory, (3) therapeutic, and (4) conciliatory. In the case of Wall Street looting and federal regulatory colluding, there have been multiple expressions or overlapping exercises in both compensation and conciliation.
Journal: CRIMEN - časopis za krivične nauke
- Issue Year: 2013
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 3-12
- Page Count: 10
- Language: Serbian