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I will pay for the following essay CRITICAL CRMINOLOGY PERSPECTIVE ANALYSIS OF CORPORATE AND TORTURE CRIMES. The essay is to be 3 pages with three to five sources, with in-text citations and a referen
I will pay for the following essay CRITICAL CRMINOLOGY PERSPECTIVE ANALYSIS OF CORPORATE AND TORTURE CRIMES. The essay is to be 3 pages with three to five sources, with in-text citations and a reference page.
Torture on Trial (2009) provides authentic information with the help of scholarly works like The Dark Side by Meyer (2008). The film also features interviews with reputable investigative journalists and human rights activists.
The Corporation (2003) is another documentary film which focuses on the abuse of power particularly by the big corporations of the US. However, this abuse of power is not localized. The glamorous retail outlets of America and Europe do not let the shoppers know that how the products to sold are actually manufactured. For example, companies like Nike pay very low wages to their textile workers who work in the remote corners of Honduras, China, or Bangladesh. In this film, the corporation is time and again imagined as an independent individual, and then this individual being is taken across mental analysis. As such, the film suggests that if the concept of corporation is considered as a person, then that person is self centered, antisocial, and power hungry. The film features interviews of several academics, industrialists, historians, and even a corporate spy!
In both the aforementioned documentaries, the concept of wrongdoing has been directly connected with ethics and socialization. A country’s law is not really very much based on moral values. rather it is a set of rules and regulations. However, powerful elements in the society are prone to bypass even this set of rules and regulations. For example, mining has long been known for being a disastrous agent of environmental harm, but it is not regarded as a criminal activity (Carrington et al 2014). The powerful mining companies continue to bypass the environmental laws and bribe the authorities to cover their exploitative activities against their workers and the environment as a whole. Likewise, even in developed countries like the UK and the US,