0000000000606946

AUTHOR

Christofer Edling

0000-0002-3909-1080

showing 2 related works from this author

The Phenomenology of Specialization of Criminal Suspects

2012

A criminal career can be either general, with the criminal committing different types of crimes, or specialized, with the criminal committing a specific type of crime. A central problem in the study of crime specialization is to determine, from the perspective of the criminal, which crimes should be considered similar and which crimes should be considered distinct. We study a large set of Swedish suspects to empirically investigate generalist and specialist behavior in crime. We show that there is a large group of suspects who can be described as generalists. At the same time, we observe a non-trivial pattern of specialization across age and gender of suspects. Women are less prone to commi…

MaleEpidemiologylcsh:MedicineCommitCriminologySocial and Behavioral SciencesPhenomenology (philosophy)SociologySettore SECS-S/06 -Metodi Mat. dell'Economia e d. Scienze Attuariali e Finanz.PsychologyComplex Systems Networks Social Sciences Criminologylcsh:Sciencehealth care economics and organizationsSocial ResearchMultidisciplinarySystems BiologyApplied MathematicsComplex SystemsSocial NetworksSocial systemSocial Systemspopulation characteristicsFemaleCrimePsychologyAlgorithmsResearch ArticlePersonalitySocial theorySocial AnthropologyCrime and CriminologySocial TheoryViolent crimeSexual and Gender IssuesAge and genderCriminal InvestigationsSpecialization (functional)mental disordersHumansSocial StratificationBiologyDemographySwedenBehaviorPopulation Biologylcsh:RPerspective (graphical)Sociology (excluding Social Work Social Psychology and Social Anthropology)social sciencesSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)Social EpidemiologyComputational SociologyAnthropologylcsh:QLarge groupLawhuman activitiesMathematicsCriminal Justice System
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Corporate Governance in Scandinavia

2008

This article addresses the role of formal institutions and informal networks on corporate governance practices. The existing corporate governance literature has mostly examined the formal institutions, such as the effect of legal systems. Our contribution is to consider the effect of informal “small world” characteristics of ownership and board networks. We use the case of Scandinavia (Denmark, Norway and Sweden) to examine these effects. Our empirical results reveal large differences in formal board and ownership structures between the Scandinavian countries, but strong similarities in terms of law enforcement, political stability, government effectiveness, rule of law, control of corrupti…

GovernmentCorporate governanceCorruptionbusiness.industrySociale netværkStrategy and Managementmedia_common.quotation_subjectCorporate governanceControl (management)Law enforcementAccountingNorgeKomparative analyserRule of lawDanmarkAccountabilityEconomicsSverigeBusiness and International ManagementbusinessStorbritannienUSAmedia_commonReputationEuropean Management Review
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