YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Criminal Justice and the Development of New Technology
Essays 181 - 210
of ones skin or the culture one has grown up with. Diversity, it can be said is as individual as the way in which one approaches p...
engine ("Brit music"). After police stopped the car, a man in his twenties had been arrested ("Brit music"). The article report...
modern society and the expansion of the meaning of class through an integrated view of individuals separation within a culture. ...
and technical assistance to increase the knowledge and skills of all personnel in the criminal justice system (WV Div. of Criminal...
for instigating change that will relegate injustice and discrimination to the countrys past. Williams (2001), in fact, contends t...
due process. The paper then examines these goals as they relate to the goals of the individual, those being social justice, equali...
that the African American and Hispanic youths were generally treated far more harshly than the white criminal youth (Poe-Yamagata;...
18 white youths were arrested for dealing drugs in 1980 while as many as 86 black youths were arrested for the same crime ("Civil,...
by and large, remove a good deal of the criminal element from the streets. However, it can be said that while the criminal element...
As the show demonstrated back then, wireless technology would become the most important technology in the field of communications....
perhaps the most prevalent of all approaches to criminal punishment utilized in the United States, the nation that holds the dubio...
was not always this way (Mocete, 1997). The prison system persists in its newfound role most likely due to the fact that there i...
houses between the juvenile leaving the correctional system and reentering the community. Juvenile delinquency is just one ...
was reduced by about half, to reach an even keel with Caucasian arrest level, with a slightly higher percentage of arrests falling...
evidence in a large amount of literature that there is a link between mental illness and crimes (Drake and Pathe, 2004). T...
The governor wanted to eliminate parole and one conservative legislator was looking for input from people involved in the system (...
are victims of hate crimes. Other special victims may be disabled, gay, HIV-infected, prisoners or students (Wallace, 2007). These...
poverty. There is always a potential bias in any system that has the danger of becoming an inequality. The basis of the law and...
toward determinate sentencing models that go along with a tough on crime stance. Of course, juvenile justice has to some extent b...
stance. After all, the police officers can write tickets for small oversights, but a friendly attitude, without overly strict enfo...
likely to go to a full jury trial * have considerable impact on the public perception (too much?) (Chapter Topics, 2007). An exa...
a company rather than career corrections officers, they are underpaid, demoralized, and the turnover is high (Friedmann, 1999). Pr...
"who commit nonviolent drug possession offenses or who violate drug-related conditions of probation or parole" to receive treatmen...
quo (Ruddell and Urbina, 2004). In his analysis of the history of incarceration in the US, Vogel (2003) charts a relationship be...
brings up the question as to "What kind of society could justify locking up so many of its young men," who are the principle demo...
perspective is that OJ Simpson was tried by a jury of his peers. There was an Asian judge and a jury made up of minorities. The pr...
initiated by the police, who have more freedom and a wider range of choices in how to proceed when dealing with a juvenile than wi...
would be that such a thing would never happen in the US without great public outcry, but that was before passage of the Patriot Ac...
The result is that "there are not one, but fifty-five court systems in the United States, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, a...
itself in context, it is perhaps helpful to begin with a brief overview of the development of correctional policies in the UK: not...