I have recently obtained my PhD in Criminology where I analysed corporate crime and harm in podcasts' discourses of two corporate crime cases.
Prior to starting my doctorate degree, I obtained a BSc in Criminology at the University of Surrey and an MRes in Criminology at the University of Glasgow. Throughout my studies, I have focussed on gaining more understanding of corporate, white-collar and financial crimes given the vast impact they have on society and (the lack of) social justice.
Outside of my academic endeavours, I have collaborated on a project titled Joint Enterprise Appeal Project, working with the charity JENGbA (joint enterprise: not guilty by association) that entailed reviewing case documentation and evidence to establish whether there are enough grounds for starting the appeal process. This was limited to cases in which the ‘joint enterprise’ doctrine had been used to convict the co-defendants. As a result, the findings of my project have been used in a House of Commons debate.
I have also obtained some professional experience as an insurance fraud investigator which allowed me to understand the practicalities of fraud investigation and to support the theoretical understanding I had gathered through academia.
My thesis investigates the portrayal of corporate crime and harm within the realm of contemporary media, specifically podcasts. Centering on two emblematic corporate crime cases, the Rana Plaza collapse of 2013 and the Deepwater Horizon explosion of 2010, I analyze the discourses present within podcasts covering these two cases and the extent to which these are rooted in hegemonic perspectives, I use thematic analysis which is informed by critical discourse analysis, meaning I focus on how events get contextualised through language and how this language is shaped by ideology and power.
I focus on four contexts in which corporate crime discourses are present. These include corporate crimes perceived as disasters, corporate crimes perceived through the lens of legal definitions of crime, corporate crime as a form of social harm and lastly, corporate crime as an expression of corporate power and capitalism. Throughout the thesis, I draw on concepts from Zemiology, cultural criminology, and media studies for the theoretical underpinnings of my empirical study.
Refereed Journal Articles
Book Chapters
Blogs
Book Review
Podcast
Corporate crime, state-corporate crime, crime and media, true crime media, new media, documentary research, crime podcasts, corporate harm, corporate manslaughter, corporate fraud
Accident, scandal, disaster: the media framing of corporate crime (2023)
Macfarlane-Horn, Jana
Crime, Law and Social Change ((Early Access))
Corporate crime discourses in podcasts and documentaries (2022)
Macfarlane-Horn, Jana
Postgraduate Research Poster Competition, The Open University