|
|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
This book offers a fresh approach to a range of pressing issues,
emphasising the value of establishing economic crime as a
sub-discipline within criminology. This will be essential reading
for a range of more applied graduate courses across the UK and
Europe on counter-fraud, money laundering, corruption, security
management and financial crime investigation. Given the prominence
of 'economic crime' amongst police forces, law enforcement agencies
and government, this book has a secondary market amongst
practitioners.
This book offers a fresh approach to a range of pressing issues,
emphasising the value of establishing economic crime as a
sub-discipline within criminology. This will be essential reading
for a range of more applied graduate courses across the UK and
Europe on counter-fraud, money laundering, corruption, security
management and financial crime investigation. Given the prominence
of 'economic crime' amongst police forces, law enforcement agencies
and government, this book has a secondary market amongst
practitioners.
The book presents a collective action perspective to explain how
extraterritoriality functions and assess when, and to what extent,
extraterritoriality is effective. A collective action perspective
provides a new account of foreign anti-bribery laws and their
extraterritorial enforcement that draws on theories discussed in
the field of economic governance. Within this framework, the book
offers an intensive analysis of US foreign anti-bribery law such as
the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), international law as it
emanates from the OECD Anti-Bribery Convention, and comparative
insights into UK law and German law. To test the theory in
practice, the book provides a unique data set of more than 40
foreign anti-bribery enforcement actions conducted by the US
Department of Justice (DOJ) and the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC), and other examples from comparative
jurisdictions. Extraterritoriality and International Bribery is
ideal reading for academics and students with an interest in global
governance, economic crime, criminology, and law and economics, as
well as practitioners concerned with foreign anti-bribery
enforcement, including compliance officers, lawyers, investigating
and prosecuting authorities, and business leaders. The book also
discusses governance alternatives existing outside international
anti-bribery law and offers policy and legal reforms proposals. The
book suggests a decentralized enforcement model with the delegation
of some enforcement tasks to an external body as the most
appropriate governance alternative.
The book presents a collective action perspective to explain how
extraterritoriality functions and assess when, and to what extent,
extraterritoriality is effective. A collective action perspective
provides a new account of foreign anti-bribery laws and their
extraterritorial enforcement that draws on theories discussed in
the field of economic governance. Within this framework, the book
offers an intensive analysis of US foreign anti-bribery law such as
the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), international law as it
emanates from the OECD Anti-Bribery Convention, and comparative
insights into UK law and German law. To test the theory in
practice, the book provides a unique data set of more than 40
foreign anti-bribery enforcement actions conducted by the US
Department of Justice (DOJ) and the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC), and other examples from comparative
jurisdictions. Extraterritoriality and International Bribery is
ideal reading for academics and students with an interest in global
governance, economic crime, criminology, and law and economics, as
well as practitioners concerned with foreign anti-bribery
enforcement, including compliance officers, lawyers, investigating
and prosecuting authorities, and business leaders. The book also
discusses governance alternatives existing outside international
anti-bribery law and offers policy and legal reforms proposals. The
book suggests a decentralized enforcement model with the delegation
of some enforcement tasks to an external body as the most
appropriate governance alternative.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R367
R340
Discovery Miles 3 400
|