Private Cops On The Fraud Beat: The Limits Of American Business Self-Regulation, 1895?1932
Source: Harvard Business School
The new organizations shaped the legal terrain of fraud, built massive public-education campaigns, and created a private law-enforcement capacity to rival that of the federal government. Largely born out of a desire among business elites to fend off proposals for extensive regulatory oversight of commercial speech, the antifraud crusade grew into a social movement that was influenced by prevailing ideas about social hygiene and emerging techniques of private governance. This initiative highlighted some enduring strengths of business self-regulation, such as agility in responding to regulatory problems.
| Format: | Size: | 452.20 | |
| Date: | Apr 2009 |



