Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1893/24117
Appears in Collections:eTheses from Stirling Management School legacy departments
Title: Deterrence, Rational Choice, and White-Collar Crime: Occupational Health and Safety in Bangladesh RMG Sector
Author(s): Chowdhury, Muhammad Faisol
Supervisor(s): Hurrell, Scott
Keywords: occupational health and safety (OHS) provisions
white-collar crime
readymade garment (RMG) sector
Bangladesh
occupational health and safety (OHS) provisions
Issue Date: Aug-2014
Publisher: University of Stirling
Abstract: The objective of this research is, firstly to investigate the managerial perception of administering occupational health and safety (OHS) provisions to reduce workplace accidents and, secondly, to explore the managerial interpretation of the idea of white-collar crime in relation to the avoidance of, or negligence in administering, the OHS provisions. This research particularly focuses on the readymade garment (RMG) sector in Bangladesh. It is qualitative in nature and follows an interpretivist and constructivist philosophical paradigm. Data were collected from two deviant cases (e.g. Tazreen Fashions Limited and Rana Plaza) and from the questionnaire responses of 24 participants from 12 RMG factories (6 outsourced and 6 subcontracted) located in Dhaka. All of the participants were top-level, male, full-time executives at the RMG factories (i.e. owners and manages). Despite its limitations, the research finds that all of the factory owners believe in the appropriateness of the OHS provisions for reducing workplace accidents effectively. It also discovers that the application of OHS as a deterrent factor to accidents exists among the outsourced factory owners and but is absent from the subcontracted factory owners. The research also unfolds the different interpretations of white-collar crime between the outsourced and subcontracted factory owners. Based on the further analysis of the empirical evidence, however, it is suggested that the evasion of OHS practices can be labelled white-collar crime.
Type: Thesis or Dissertation
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1893/24117

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