Coronavirus and Fraud in the UK: From the Responsibilisation of the Civil Society to the Deresponsibilisation of the State

Lorenzo Pasculli 'Coronavirus and fraud in the UK: from the responsibilisation of the civil society to the deresponsibilisation of the state' [2020] 25(2) Coventry Law Journal 3-23

21 Pages Posted: 22 Dec 2020 Last revised: 23 Dec 2020

See all articles by Lorenzo Pasculli

Lorenzo Pasculli

Coventry University - Coventry Law School; Imperial College London - Centre for Languages, Culture and Communication

Date Written: December 16, 2020

Abstract

The sudden move of our lives online during the coronavirus pandemic has dramatically increased fraud risks. The personal and economic harms are enormous. The UK Government is responding with a two-fold approach. On the one hand, it relies on traditional law enforcement. On the other hand, it seeks to encourage individuals, businesses and public agencies to take responsibility in controlling and preventing crime by changing their practices through information campaigns and risk assessment and management., a strategy known as 'responsibilisation'. While literature in the last few decades has broadly analysed the social implications of responsibilisation on crime control in general, not many studies have focused on the specific area of financial crime. This study assesses the UK response to COVID-19-related fraud risks in light of the literature on responsibilisation through a comparative review of different policies and practices by various government agencies. Our analysis will reveal that the UK Government’s two-fold approach to fraud and financial crime is inherently inadequate to effectively prevent crime. Strained law enforcement agencies and regulators struggle to cope with the high numbers of reported frauds. As a result, both deterrence and retribution are undermined. On the other hand, the fixation on the surgical identification, dissection and rectification of a myriad of micro-situations that can entail a risk of crime causes the government to lose sight of the root causes of crime - biological, psychological, social, cultural, economic and political. After our critical discussion, we will put forwards some recommendations to improve not only COVID-19-related anti-fraud policies and practices but, more generally, the response to fraud and financial crime.

Keywords: coronavirus, COVID-19, fraud, financial crime, economic crime, crime control, criminology

Suggested Citation

Pasculli, Lorenzo, Coronavirus and Fraud in the UK: From the Responsibilisation of the Civil Society to the Deresponsibilisation of the State (December 16, 2020). Lorenzo Pasculli 'Coronavirus and fraud in the UK: from the responsibilisation of the civil society to the deresponsibilisation of the state' [2020] 25(2) Coventry Law Journal 3-23, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3751262 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3751262

Lorenzo Pasculli (Contact Author)

Coventry University - Coventry Law School ( email )

Priory Street
Coventry, CV1 5FB
United Kingdom

HOME PAGE: http://https://www.coventry.ac.uk/study-at-coventry/faculties-and-schools/coventry-law-school/

Imperial College London - Centre for Languages, Culture and Communication ( email )

South Kensington Campus
Exhibition Road
London, Greater London SW7 2AZ
United Kingdom

HOME PAGE: http://www.imperial.ac.uk/horizons

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