TY - CHAP
T1 - Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Violence Victims' Rights in Italy. A Long and Winding Road
AU - Visconti, Arianna
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Corporate violence is a form of corporate deviance which causes deaths, injuries, or illnesses to people by way of illegal behaviours occurring in the course of the legitimate activity of an organisation. Notwithstanding a long history of industrial accidents and environmental disasters, Italy came late (in 2001) to introducing a system of (substantially) criminal (albeit formally administrative) liability for legal persons in cases of organisational crime, and even later (in 2007) to extending said responsibility to corporate manslaughter. Even today, though, corporate responsibility for the negligent causation of human deaths, or serious injuries, remains quite limited in scope (especially when compared to extended corporate quasi-criminal liability for offences which do not involve such serious harms), and its enforcement is limited by a set of structural features, as we will illustrate through one recent and notorious case. This, coupled with the partial and unsystematic implementation, in Italy, of Directive 2012/29/EU, undermines an actual recognition and implementation of the rights of victims of corporate violence, who, on the one hand, can frequently be qualified as ‘vulnerable’ within the meaning of the Directive, but, on the other, still suffer from a structural lack of recognition, information, support, and protection.
AB - Corporate violence is a form of corporate deviance which causes deaths, injuries, or illnesses to people by way of illegal behaviours occurring in the course of the legitimate activity of an organisation. Notwithstanding a long history of industrial accidents and environmental disasters, Italy came late (in 2001) to introducing a system of (substantially) criminal (albeit formally administrative) liability for legal persons in cases of organisational crime, and even later (in 2007) to extending said responsibility to corporate manslaughter. Even today, though, corporate responsibility for the negligent causation of human deaths, or serious injuries, remains quite limited in scope (especially when compared to extended corporate quasi-criminal liability for offences which do not involve such serious harms), and its enforcement is limited by a set of structural features, as we will illustrate through one recent and notorious case. This, coupled with the partial and unsystematic implementation, in Italy, of Directive 2012/29/EU, undermines an actual recognition and implementation of the rights of victims of corporate violence, who, on the one hand, can frequently be qualified as ‘vulnerable’ within the meaning of the Directive, but, on the other, still suffer from a structural lack of recognition, information, support, and protection.
KW - Corporate Crime
KW - Corporate Liability
KW - Corporate Violence
KW - Manslaughter
KW - Organizational Crime
KW - Risk Assessment
KW - Risk Management
KW - Victims of Crime
KW - Corporate Crime
KW - Corporate Liability
KW - Corporate Violence
KW - Manslaughter
KW - Organizational Crime
KW - Risk Assessment
KW - Risk Management
KW - Victims of Crime
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/289016
UR - https://www.routledge.com/corporate-criminal-liability-and-sanctions-current-trends-and-policy-changes/meiselles-ryder-visconti/p/book/9781032349961
U2 - 10.4324/9781003324829-4
DO - 10.4324/9781003324829-4
M3 - Chapter
SN - 9781032349961
VL - 2025
T3 - ROUTLEDGE FRONTIERS OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE
SP - 33
EP - 50
BT - Corporate Criminal Liability and Sanctions. Current Trends and Policy Changes
A2 - Meiselles, Michala
A2 - Ryder, Nicholas
A2 - Visconti, Arianna
ER -