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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2017
1 When referring to corporate and state crimes collectively, I will use the term organizational crimes.
2 U.S. Participation in the UN: Report by the President to the Congress 239-40 (1969).
3 In the 1995 Summary Record of the ILC’s 47th Session, one member is reported as having said that an unspecified analogy to corporate crimes was “extremely tenuous.”
4 Fischel, Daniel R. & Sykes, Alan O., Corporate Crime, 25 J. Legal Stud. 319 (1996)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
5 Model Penal Code and Commentaries art. 2.07, § 332 (1985).
6 Coffee, John C. Jr., No Soul to Damn: No Body to Kick’: An UnscandalizedInquiry into the Problem of Corporate Punishment, 79 Mich. L. Rev. 386, 447 (1981)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
7 Coffee, John C. Jr., Paradigms Lost: The Blurring of the Criminal and Civil Law Models—And What Can Be Done About It , 101 Yale L. J. 1875 (1992)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
8 Bros, Carol L., A Fresh Assault on the Hazardous Workplace: Corporate Homicide Liability for Workplace Fatalities in Minnesota, 15 Wm. Mitchell L. Rev. 287 (1989)Google Scholar.
9 See, e.g., Khanna, V.S., Corporate Criminal Liability: What Purpose Does It Serve?, 109 Harv. L. Rev. 1477 (1996)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
10 Coffee, supra note 7, at 1877.
11 Coffee, supra note 6, at 389-93.
12 ld. at 410.