@article{Alalehto_2018, title={The Origin of White Collar Criminality? – Exploring a Gene x Environment Interaction Hypothesis}, volume={7}, url={https://www.lifescienceglobal.com/pms/index.php/ijcs/article/view/5471}, DOI={10.6000/1929-4409.2018.07.14}, abstractNote={<p class="04-abstract">The aim for this article is the elementary question: why does white collar criminals become white collar criminals? The answer is a hypothetical syllogistic constructed hypothesis for further empirical exploration in the agenda. The hypothesis takes its point of departure in biosocial criminology, especially the gene-environment interplay, focused on white collar criminality. The hypothesis proposes a link between criminal attitudes and criminal behavior based on how biological (e.g. intergenerational heredity, MAO-A), neurological (e.g. executive functioning, cortical thickness) and social-psychological/sociological factors (e.g. peer-group, rationalizations, social stress, loss of class status) correlates to each other as a system of mechanisms.</p>}, journal={International Journal of Criminology and Sociology}, author={Alalehto, Tage}, year={2018}, month={Jun.}, pages={196–205} }