Acknowledgements
Preface: Will McMahon, Centre for Crime and Justice Studies
Introduction: A Very British Corruption, David Whyte
Part 1: Neo-liberalism and Corruption
1: Moving Beyond A Narrow Definition Of Corruption, David Beetham
2: The New Normal: Moral Economies in the ‘Age of Fraud’, Jörg Wiegratz
3: Neoliberalism, politics and institutional corruption, David Miller
Part 2: Corruption in Policing
4: Policed by Consent? The Myth and the Betrayal, Phil Scraton
5: Hillsborough: The Long Struggle to Expose Police Corruption, Sheila Coleman
6: Justice Denied: Police Accountability and the Killing of Mark Duggan, Joanna Gilmore and Waqas Tufail
Part 3: Corruption in Government and Public Institutions
7: British State Torture: From ‘Search and Try’ to ‘Hide and Lie’, Paul O’Connor
8: The return of the repressed: secrets, lies, denial and ‘historical’ institutional child sexual abuse scandals, Chris Greer and Eugene McLaughlin
9: Politics, Government and Corruption: The Case of the Private Finance Initiative, Michael Mair and Paul Jones
10: Revolving-door Politics and Corruption, Stuart Wilks-Heeg
Part 4: Corruption in Finance and the Corporate Sector
11: Accounting for Corruption in the ‘Big 4’ Accountancy Firms, Prem Sikka
12: On Her Majesty’s Secrecy Service, John Christensen
13: Corporate Theft and Impunity in Financial Services, Steve Tombs
14: High Pay and Corruption, Luke Hildyard
Notes on Contributors
Index