Attitudes to economic crime
Shepherd, D., Button, M., and Hawkins, C. (In Press). The Dishonest Disposition and Everyday Economic Criminality of the British Public. Journal of Economic Criminology, 100090.
Economic criminology
Button, M. and Shepherd, D. (In Press) The Case for Economic Criminology. Journal of Economic Criminology
Theory
Button, M., Hock, B., Shepherd, D., and Gilmour, P. (In Press). Understanding the Rise of Fraud in England and Wales through Field Theory: Blip or Flip?. Journal of Economic Criminology, 100012.
Tickner, P. and Button, M. (2021), Deconstructing the origins of Cressey’s Fraud Triangle, Journal of Financial Crime, Vol. 28 No. 3, pp. 722-731. https://doi.org/10.1108/JFC-10-2020-0204
Shepherd, D. and Button, M. (2019) Organisational Inhibitions to Addressing Occupational Fraud: A Theory of Differential Rationalisation. Deviant Behavior, 40, 971-991.
Button, M. and Tunley, M. (2015) Explaining Fraud Deviancy Attenuation in the United Kingdom. Crime, Law and Social Change, 63: 49-64
Button, M. and Tunley, M. (2017) The 2008 Financial Crisis and Fraud: the Roles of Immoral Phlegmatism, Deviancy Attenuation and De-Labelling. In, Ryder, N., Tucker, J. and Turksen, U. (eds) The Financial Crisis and White Collar Crime – Legislative and Policy Responses. London: Routledge.
Button, M. and Cross, C. (2017) Technology and Fraud: The ‘Fraudogenic’ Consequences of the Internet Revolution. In McGuire, M. and Holt, T. (eds) The Routledge Handbook of Technology, Crime and Justice. London: Routledge, pp. 78-95.