Fraud

Front Cover
Taylor & Francis, 2006 - Law - 254 pages

Fraud remains one of the most important crimes and causes billions of pounds of losses each year, many thousands of people are employed to try to prevent it, but it has remained largely neglected in the literature.

This book provides comprehensive coverage of the main issues involved in fraud, its definition, costs, the nature of the offenders involved in committing fraud, and the issues involved in fraud investigation. It is written by one of the foremost authorities on the subject, and covers fraud in the widest sense, ranging from benefit fraud to tax evasion, credit card fraud, and paying particular attention to fraud using the internet. A wide range of case studies are presented, portraits are provided of the ways in which a large number of organizations seek to deal with fraud.

This book will be essential reading for anybody with a professional interest in fraud and its prevention, as well as the wide number of courses within law, criminology, social policy and business and management.

 

Contents

1 Fraud the academic and practitioner contexts
1
2 What is fraud?
19
3 The cost of fraud
42
4 Who commits fraud and what types of fraud?
55
5 From need to greed why is fraud committed?
80
6 Overspill old frauds new frauds and fraud in other criminal activities
100
7 How fraud is dealt with investigations
120
8 Regulation compliance and audit
135
9 Inhouse approaches
167
10 Investigation frameworks
189
11 Punishment asset recovery and prevention
202
the futures for fraud?
226
Scotland
236
References
238
Index
248
Copyright

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About the author (2006)

Professor Alan Doig ran the Fraud Studies Unit at Teeside University until his retirement in 2010. Recent publications include the Handbook on Fraud Investigation and Prevention (Gower, 2010), and Fraud: Law, Practice and Procedure (LexisNexis, 2004).

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