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Papers On Criminal Justice & Corrections
Page 16 of 42
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Criminal Justice Ethics
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This 12 page paper provides an overview of questions about ethics in criminal justice, including issues like the slippery slope and the issue of discretion. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: MHCrimJEthics.rtf
Criminal Justice Management
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In 9 pages the author discusses the topic of criminal justice management. Criminal justice management is often not considered when one thinks of the different criminal justice agencies. All of those agencies need managers that effectively perform their duties, while maintaining a focus on what is best for their prospective agencies. Many people have theories on what constitutes an effective manager and how that manager should be trained. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Filename: Cjm.wps
Criminal Justice Policy Change: Open-System
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6 pages in length. Community interactivity where criminal justice is concerned has become a critical component in the ongoing struggle to balance the ever-lopsided presence of perpetrators to law enforcement officers. Until recently, the aspect of a closed-system approach was looked upon as the most appropriate way to protect society against criminal infiltrators, however, law enforcement officials have come to realize the beneficial impact of involving community members by means of the open-system approach is not only practical and advantageous from a criminal justice perspective but also economically sound in a time when police funding is stretched as far as it can go and it still comes up short. At issue, however, is the manner by which myriad communities across the country have failed to realize these benefits and continue to employ a closed-system ideology. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Filename: TLCCrmJsPolCh.rtf
Criminal Justice System / Significant Challenges Confronting Corrections in the Twenty-First Century
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In 7 pages, the author discusses three significant challenges confronting corrections in the 21st century. "The criminal justice system is comprised of the police, the courts, and the department of corrections. The criminal justice system is a checks and balance system, in that each component defines the others. These components work independently and together in order to ensure that laws are kept, that people tried for crimes are given their Constitutional rights, and that those found guilty are either punished or rehabilitated or both. The field of corrections has three significant challenges facing it in the 21st century: prison overcrowding, limited funds, and protecting society from criminals by imprisonment and/or rehabilitation." Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Filename: PCcjscr.doc
Criminal justice system in Turkey
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An eight page paper which looks at the structure and organisation of the criminal justice system in Turkey, with particular reference to the treatment of political detainees, juvenile offenders, and the recent reforms which have been implemented. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Filename: JLturkey.rtf
Criminal Justice System: A Necessity?
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An 11 page paper which discusses whether or
not we need a criminal justice system as it relates to the Australian Criminal Justice
System. The argument presented is that Australia, like any other country, has great need
of a criminal justice system. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Filename: RAaustrlaw.wps
Criminal Justice System: Austria And The United States
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5 pages in length. The differences between Austria and America's criminal justice systems were not always so broad; in fact, there was a time when both mirrored a decidedly punitive approach when it came to criminal justice. Coupled with Austria's conservative nature, this particular stance was neither popular nor productive; as such, a trend began taking place throughout the 1980s and 1990s that incorporated a more mediation-minded position to addressing the perpetual nature of criminal activity. Compared with this newfangled victim-offender mediation, the United States continues to utilize harsh and unrelenting tactics when it comes to its overall approach to criminal justice. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: TLCCrmJs.rtf
Criminal Justice System: Goals
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A 6 page paper which examines the goals of the criminal justice system. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: RAcrmjst.rtf
Criminal Justice: Goal And Policy Implementation
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5 pages in length. The writer discuss that with conventional policing often serving as the instigator of social unrest, it stands to reason how such a proactive and positive approach to deterring crime is far superior to the traditional strategy of intimidating police patrol. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: TLCCrmJsGoal.rtf
Criminal Law: Intent To Kill
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A 14 page paper that discusses criminal law in the United Kingdom. Specifically, this paper discusses how the Court of Appeals have clarified the meaning of intention in terms of acts that cause grave bodily harm or death. Four cases are explained, R v Moloney; R V Hancock and Shankland; R v Nedrick; and R v Woollin. These cases of appeal worked to clarify the meaning of intention. Two hypothetical cases are then discussed for which the other four cases are used to determine if the defendants' actions met the requirements for mens rea. At this point, further cases from the Courts of Appeals are brought into the discussion. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Filename: PGukintnt.rtf
Criminal Law: What Should Be Repealed Or Modified
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5 pages in length. The writer briefly discusses how California's 3 strikes statute should be repealed and the insanity plea should be modified. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: TLCCrimLwRpl.rtf
Criminal Policies
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A 4 page paper which examines conflict and crime control along with consensus and due process as they offer approaches concerning criminal policies. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Filename: RAcpoli.rtf
Criminal Procedure And Evidence
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6 pages in length. Criminal procedure encompasses myriad components that work in tandem to uphold the law and at the same time catch the perpetrator. Stage one is where the crime is first recognized or detected, with law enforcement officials utilizing the 'everyone's a suspect' approach before zeroing in on any particular individual. Once a specific suspect has been identified, the procedure moves into the second stage of accusation where the individual is fingered for allegedly committing the crime; from here, it quickly moves to number three, the arrest stage. If the alleged perpetrator is underage, he or she will be moved to juvenile court; otherwise, the procedure goes on to the fourth stage of searching for evidence. This stage can occur prior to or after the arrest depending upon the circumstances. Stages five and six – booking and follow-up investigation – round out the six main stages of criminal procedure. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Filename: TLCCrimProc.rtf
Criminal Sentencing: White Black and Mental
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(8pp). What we will be looking at in this
discussion are basically two issues that have
somehow become enmeshed: According to Davis
(1998), more than 70 percent, of the imprisoned
population, are people of color. It is rarely
acknowledged, that the fastest growing group of
prisoners are black women, and that Native American
prisoners are the largest group per capita.
Approximately five million people - including those
on probation and parole -- are directly under the
surveillance of the criminal justice system. And
according to Ditton (1999) sixteen percent of those
incarcerated in state systems are mentally ill.
One of the questions that then arises from this
data is, are the white mentally ill sentenced to
incarceration at a different ratio than people of
color? Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Filename: BBblkcri.doc
Criminal Sentencing: White, Black, and Mental
[ send me this paper ]
(8 pp). What we will be looking at in this
discussion are basically two issues, that have
somehow become enmeshed: According to Davis
(1998), more than 70 percent, of the imprisoned
population, are people of color. It is rarely
acknowledged, that the fastest growing group of
prisoners are black women, and that Native American
prisoners are the largest group per capita.
Approximately five million people - including those
on probation and parole -- are directly under the
surveillance of the criminal justice system. And
according to Ditton (1999) sixteen percent of those
incarcerated in state systems are mentally ill.
One of the questions that then arises from this
data is, are the white mentally ill sentenced to
incarceration at a different ratio than people of
color? Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Filename: BBblkcrR.doc
Criminal Treatment Program And Criminal Theory
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10 pages in length. Restructuring an individual's life when he or she has chosen the criminal route is both a long and arduous process; for lawbreakers who do not respond to standard scare tactics as a means by which to set them straight, there are tougher, more intimidating ways to achieve this objective. Understanding why some people turn to illegal activity while others do not is what criminal theories strive to reflect; attempting to correlate the relationship between theory and treatment finds one often borrowing from more than a single explanation. Boot camps and shock incarceration programs represent two treatment programs where a specific objective is sought through a series of harsh and enlightened interchange in order to ready criminals for reenter into society on its terms. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Filename: TLCcrimT.rtf
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