U158160.pdf (11.62 MB)
Download fileInsurance fraud : causes, characteristics and prevention
thesis
posted on 2014-09-23, 14:57 authored by Karen Ann GillAlthough there is a growing volume of research on various kinds of fraud,
relatively little has been written about insurance fraud. Even fewer studies have
been undertaken on the prevention of insurance fraud. This study aims to fill this
gap. It focuses not on large-scale corporate fraud but on individuals ‘fiddling’
their home, motor and travel policies.
During the course of this study, the researcher surveyed the public and found that
insurance fraud is commonplace, and committed by people of different classes—
often unwittingly, and rarely with much regret. Insurance companies were
surveyed, and data collected by interviews with insurance staff. It emerged that
many insurers did not realise they had an insurance fraud problem, and those that
did were either doing little to prevent it or were using ineffective methods.
Insurance fraudsters are often given a great deal of help, often by officials who
abuse the trust placed in them; insurers’ relationship with the police and with loss
adjusters is not geared to stopping fraudsters, and insurance fraud is thus rendered
easier. To illustrate this, and with the help of an insurance company, the researcher
conducted a mock insurance fraud, and found it easy to commit.
This study shows that insurance fraud is mostly an opportunistic crime. Within the
study of crime prevention there is an approach which seeks to reduce the number
of offences by curtailing the opportunities for crime. This is known as ‘situational
crime prevention’, and is based on the ‘rational choice perspective’. Professor Ron
Clarke, whose name is most closely associated with the approach, has called for
more research to apply the principles and techniques of opportunity reduction to a
range of crime types. This thesis represents an attempt to do this in relation to
insurance fraud, and in so doing to stimulate ideas on how insurance fraud can be
tackled effectively. In addition, it offers a new perspective on the situational
approach and the techniques of opportunity reduction, plus a revised classification
of these techniques. At the same time it offers a critique of the situational
approach itself. The findings suggest that if fraud within the insurance industry is
to be taken seriously then there are a range of structural concerns that need to be
tackled, and that this moves beyond the scope of situational prevention.
History
Date of award
2002-06-05Author affiliation
Department of CriminologyAwarding institution
University of LeicesterQualification level
- Doctoral
Qualification name
- PhD