1. Previously presented at the 1995 Annual Meeting of the American Society of Criminology in Boston, Massachusetts, and subsequently revised for publication here.
2. R. Nader, R. Brownstein and J. Richard,Who's Poisoning America: Corporate Polluters and Their Victims in the Chemical Age, (San Francisco, Sierra Club Books, 1981).
3. See, for example, A. Block and F. Scarpitti,Poisoning for Profit: The Mafia and Toxic Waste in America, (New York, William Morrow & Co., Inc., 1985). See also E Pearce and S. Tombs, “Ideology, Hegemony and Empiricism: Compliance Theories of Regulation,”British Journal of Criminology 30, 4: 423–443, 1990. Also A. Szasz, “Corporations, Organized Crime, and the Disposal of Hazardous Waste: An Examination of the Making of a Criminogenic Regulatory Structure,”Criminology 24: 1–27, 1986.
4. D. Rebovich,Dangerous Ground: The World of Hazardous Waste Crime, (New Brunswick, NJ, Transaction Press, 1992).
5. S. Humphreys, “An Enemy of the People: Prosecuting the Corporate Polluter as a Common Law Criminal,”American University Law Review 39, 2: 315–330, 1990.