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This title is printed to order. This book may have been self-published. If so, we cannot guarantee the quality of the content. In the main most books will have gone through the editing process however some may not. We therefore suggest that you be aware of this before ordering this book. If in doubt check either the author or publisher’s details as we are unable to accept any returns unless they are faulty. Please contact us if you have any questions.
At the dawn of the twenty-first century, Enron was hailed as one of America's most innovative companies. With soaring revenues, a bold corporate culture, and a reputation for redefining the energy industry, it was a Wall Street darling. Behind the polished image, however, lay one of the most complex and catastrophic frauds ever perpetrated by a public corporation.
White-Collar Crime: The Enron Scandal by A.J. Rathore traces the meteoric rise and infamous collapse of Enron, revealing how ambition unchecked by ethics led to disaster. More than a story of accounting tricks and financial engineering, this book examines the people, policies, and pressures that made the scandal possible-and inevitable.
Drawing on the broader history of corporate power in America, the book situates Enron's downfall in the long struggle between free-market ambition and the need for accountability. From the ruthless strategies of nineteenth-century tycoons to the deregulatory fervor of the late twentieth century, the narrative shows how a culture of profit-at-all-costs created fertile ground for deception.
Inside these pages, you will discover:
The origins of Enron as a natural gas pipeline company and its transformation into a global energy empire. The role of charismatic leaders like Kenneth Lay and Jeffrey Skilling, who promised endless growth while hiding mounting losses. How creative accounting practices, special purpose entities, and financial manipulation concealed the company's true condition. The complicity of auditors, regulators, and investors in overlooking red flags. The devastating impact of the collapse on employees, shareholders, and public trust.
This is more than a corporate case study-it is a cautionary tale about the dangers of unchecked greed and the fragile foundations of financial markets. The book examines how the Enron scandal reshaped regulation, leading to reforms such as the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, and why its lessons remain vital in an era of increasingly complex financial systems.
Accessible and thoroughly researched, White-Collar Crime: The Enron Scandal is written for readers who want to understand how one company's downfall became a symbol of corporate corruption. Students of business and economics will find a detailed analysis of accounting practices and governance failures. General readers of true crime and history will be gripped by the human drama-the executives who gambled with other people's futures, the employees who lost everything, and the regulators who were forced to pick up the pieces.
The Enron story is not simply about the past. It continues to echo in every financial scandal that has followed, from mortgage crises to tech frauds. By looking closely at how Enron fell, this book offers insight into the ongoing struggle to balance innovation with integrity, ambition with responsibility, and capitalism with accountability.
For anyone interested in the intersection of money, power, and ethics, White-Collar Crime: The Enron Scandal provides both a riveting narrative and an enduring warning.
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This title is printed to order. This book may have been self-published. If so, we cannot guarantee the quality of the content. In the main most books will have gone through the editing process however some may not. We therefore suggest that you be aware of this before ordering this book. If in doubt check either the author or publisher’s details as we are unable to accept any returns unless they are faulty. Please contact us if you have any questions.
At the dawn of the twenty-first century, Enron was hailed as one of America's most innovative companies. With soaring revenues, a bold corporate culture, and a reputation for redefining the energy industry, it was a Wall Street darling. Behind the polished image, however, lay one of the most complex and catastrophic frauds ever perpetrated by a public corporation.
White-Collar Crime: The Enron Scandal by A.J. Rathore traces the meteoric rise and infamous collapse of Enron, revealing how ambition unchecked by ethics led to disaster. More than a story of accounting tricks and financial engineering, this book examines the people, policies, and pressures that made the scandal possible-and inevitable.
Drawing on the broader history of corporate power in America, the book situates Enron's downfall in the long struggle between free-market ambition and the need for accountability. From the ruthless strategies of nineteenth-century tycoons to the deregulatory fervor of the late twentieth century, the narrative shows how a culture of profit-at-all-costs created fertile ground for deception.
Inside these pages, you will discover:
The origins of Enron as a natural gas pipeline company and its transformation into a global energy empire. The role of charismatic leaders like Kenneth Lay and Jeffrey Skilling, who promised endless growth while hiding mounting losses. How creative accounting practices, special purpose entities, and financial manipulation concealed the company's true condition. The complicity of auditors, regulators, and investors in overlooking red flags. The devastating impact of the collapse on employees, shareholders, and public trust.
This is more than a corporate case study-it is a cautionary tale about the dangers of unchecked greed and the fragile foundations of financial markets. The book examines how the Enron scandal reshaped regulation, leading to reforms such as the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, and why its lessons remain vital in an era of increasingly complex financial systems.
Accessible and thoroughly researched, White-Collar Crime: The Enron Scandal is written for readers who want to understand how one company's downfall became a symbol of corporate corruption. Students of business and economics will find a detailed analysis of accounting practices and governance failures. General readers of true crime and history will be gripped by the human drama-the executives who gambled with other people's futures, the employees who lost everything, and the regulators who were forced to pick up the pieces.
The Enron story is not simply about the past. It continues to echo in every financial scandal that has followed, from mortgage crises to tech frauds. By looking closely at how Enron fell, this book offers insight into the ongoing struggle to balance innovation with integrity, ambition with responsibility, and capitalism with accountability.
For anyone interested in the intersection of money, power, and ethics, White-Collar Crime: The Enron Scandal provides both a riveting narrative and an enduring warning.