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Showing 1 - 7 of
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This book offers practical advice on designing, conducting and
analyzing interviews with 'elite' and 'expert' persons (or
'socially prominent actors'), with a focus on criminology and
criminal justice. It offers dilemmas and examples of 'good' and
'bad' practices in order to encourage readers to critically asses
their own work. It also addresses methodological issues which
include: access, power imbalances, getting past 'corporate
answers', considerations of whether or not it is at times
acceptable to ask leading questions and whether to enter a
discussion with a respondent at all. This book will be valuable to
students and scholars conducting qualitative research.
This book explores the subject of research misconduct: its
definition, what behaviours should fall under its label, and the
types of preventive and repressive procedures that should be put to
practice to combat it. Adopting a criminological perspective, Faria
views research misconduct as a locus of analysis for corporate and
white-collar crime. Based upon an empirical study involving
in-depth interviews and documentary analysis, this original
research offers an interesting approach to an age-old problem which
is growing ever more important. The commodification of research -
together with perceived risks of research misconduct - is opening
the way to ambiguous and ineffective forms of social control over
scholars, affecting their commitment to research integrity and the
responsible conduct of research. Despite this, however, little
consensus around the phenomenon exists. Seeking to counter this,
Faria opens up the discussion on the potential social harms arising
from the current state of affairs, and argues that that criminology
should task itself with understanding and researching the pressing
topic of research misconduct, including fabrication, falsification,
and plagiarism, as well as questionable research practices.
From corporate corruption and the facilitation of money laundering,
to food fraud and labour exploitation, European citizens continue
to be confronted by serious corporate and white-collar crimes.
Presenting an original series of provocative essays, this book
offers a European framing of white-collar crime. Experts from
different countries foreground what is unique, innovative or
different about white-collar and corporate crimes that are so
strongly connected to Europe, including the tensions that exist
within and between the nation-states of Europe, and within the
institutions of the European region. This European voice provides
an original contribution to discourses surrounding a form of crime
which is underrepresented in current criminological literature.
This volume introduces innovative and inspired qualitative methods
through topics on crime commission, victimisation and crime
control. It highlights how qualitative methods offer significant
insights that frame our understanding of the narratives, events,
theoretical perspectives, and realities of the social world. This
book includes chapters discussing cutting-edge methods, which
demonstrate how qualitative research can expand beyond traditional
approaches. It offers diversity in research, including gender,
race, and geographic sensitivities. The volume addresses a
multitude of approaches for using qualitative methodologies,
including innovative uses of technology mediums-such as social
media, participatory videos, Zoom interviewing, and photographic
visual methods-as means of collecting and co-producing relevant
data on meaning. Ultimately, this book illustrates how qualitative
criminology allows for deeper and more nuanced understandings of
local and regional specificities in a globalized world, and how
social interactions are influenced by individual interpretations,
social interactions, and collective decision making.This volume is
an essential read for graduate students and researchers in
criminology and other social science disciplines interested in
qualitative empirical research and informed policy making.
From corporate corruption and the facilitation of money laundering,
to food fraud and labour exploitation, European citizens continue
to be confronted by serious corporate and white-collar crimes.
Presenting an original series of provocative essays, this book
offers a European framing of white-collar crime. Experts from
different countries foreground what is unique, innovative or
different about white-collar and corporate crimes that are so
strongly connected to Europe, including the tensions that exist
within and between the nation-states of Europe, and within the
institutions of the European region. This European voice provides
an original contribution to discourses surrounding a form of crime
which is underrepresented in current criminological literature.
This book explores the subject of research misconduct: its
definition, what behaviours should fall under its label, and the
types of preventive and repressive procedures that should be put to
practice to combat it. Adopting a criminological perspective, Faria
views research misconduct as a locus of analysis for corporate and
white-collar crime. Based upon an empirical study involving
in-depth interviews and documentary analysis, this original
research offers an interesting approach to an age-old problem which
is growing ever more important. The commodification of research -
together with perceived risks of research misconduct - is opening
the way to ambiguous and ineffective forms of social control over
scholars, affecting their commitment to research integrity and the
responsible conduct of research. Despite this, however, little
consensus around the phenomenon exists. Seeking to counter this,
Faria opens up the discussion on the potential social harms arising
from the current state of affairs, and argues that that criminology
should task itself with understanding and researching the pressing
topic of research misconduct, including fabrication, falsification,
and plagiarism, as well as questionable research practices.
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