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Criminal Justice
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Criminal justice and criminology developed from two major fields of study: the law and sociology. While related, the two terms are distinct. Criminology is the study of crime, including its costs, causes, and consequences. In contrast, criminal justice is the study of system in which behavior is designated as criminal and then those crimes are detected, tried, and punished. While criminology focuses primarily on the social aspects of crime, criminal justice focuses primarily on the legal aspects of crime. However, the relationship between law and society is well-established. Not only do social norms and values help dictate what behaviors are considered criminal, but also the designation of behaviors as illegal or legal helps dictate what a society views as moral and ethical. Therefore, criminal justice and criminology majors need to have a thorough understanding of both fields.

Criminology is a branch of sociology. There are three sociological approaches to crime: the Classical School, the Positivist School, and the Chicago School. While only formally studied in recent times, social theories about criminology have been circulating since the development of legal systems and laws. Criminologists look at how society impacts criminality, but also how criminality impacts society. More specifically, criminologists look at the broader details of crimes to draw cultural conclusions about criminal behaviors, values, and norms. They specifically look at: where crimes occur, what types of crimes occur, why those crimes happen, how frequently those crimes happen, the consequences of crime for offenders, the consequences of crime for victims, the consequences of crime for society as whole, and how the government responds to criminal behavior. For example, the American criminal justice system was established to ensure that criminal defendants had certain constitutional protections, but victim advocacy groups have lobbied to ensure that victims also have some rights in the criminal prosecution process. Victim impact statements are one way that victims are able to have an influence in the criminal justice process.

In contrast, criminal justice looks at the various systems in place that define, detect, and punish criminal behavior. Criminal justice is considered by many to be synonymous with law enforcement, but the criminal justice system actually encompasses more than just law enforcement. There are three major components in the criminal justice system: law enforcement, courts, and corrections. Each component plays a role in preventing and punishing behavior that is deemed illegal. A non-specified component of the criminal justice system is the legislature, which not only determines which behaviors are considered illegal, but also the consequences for those illegal behaviors, including the range of potential punishments for those who engage in those behaviors. Law enforcement officers, also known as police officers, serve three roles in the criminal justice system: crime prevention, crime detection, and identification and apprehension of criminals. The court systems, which consists of the courts themselves, as well as the prosecuting and defense attorneys, judges, and juries, determine whether the suspect is guilty, and sentence them to their punishments. The corrections system refers to any part of the post-sentencing process that is responsible for carrying out sentencing. Prisons, jails, halfway houses, prison guards, corrections officers, probation officers, and parole officers are all part of the corrections system. [ Show Less ]

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Paper Undergraduate
The Yorkshire Ripper murder case in the UK
Abstract Some serial murderers have been known to subject their victims to unimaginable pain and torture before eventually killing them. This they do for other reasons other than money, fame, or even love. They do it for fun. They derive intense pleasure from dehumanizing and torturing their victims. This text concerns itself with torture, its essence, and how information relating to torture can help detectives and investigators understand a killer's signature.
Thesis High School
Youth Crime in Canada
The sociological theory examined within this paper is functionalism, which is one of the most widely used and longstanding sociological theories. Essentially, this theory offers the viewpoint that society functions as a series of social systems that attempt to reach a point of stasis. One of the most influential aspects of this theory applied to Canadian youth crime is the YCJA.
Paper Undergraduate
Sex differences in behavioral and physiological reactions
establish a greater understanding of the prison system and its abilities to meet public and prisoner expectations/needs. Though prisoner reactions to and evaluations of prison conditions were the actual subject of study, a reading of the presented research suggests that actual conditions were being indirectly monitored via this research through the stated perceptions of male and female prisoners. Gender differences in prison perception
Paper Undergraduate
Offender Risk Assessment the Assessment
The assessment of an offender's risk to re-offend is one of the most important tasks faced by those who work in a correctional environment. On a daily basis, prison staff, probation and parole officers, and parole board…
Thesis Masters
Prison Purposes, Reform, and Recidivism in the US Justice System
This is an eight page paper about prisons. An analysis of the purposes for prisons in the US justice system. An examination of current conditions in US prisons. A review of programs which seek to reduce recidivism in modern prisons. A discussion about rehabilitative programs in prisons. An analysis of re-introduction to society programs, or the lack thereof. Current approaches to protect the public upon a prisoner's release. New proposals to help protect the public and ensure that a prison does not re-offend upon release
Essay Doctorate
Wrongful Conviction Textbook, Compare Problems Wrongful Conviction
This paper discuses the concept of wrongful convictions in the international context by focusing on three countries: Canada, the U.S., and the U.K. The essay analyzes individuals who were wrongfully convicted, their condition consequent to being released from prison, the compensations that they received, etc. It also relates to concepts that make it likely for particular individuals to be wrongfully convicted.
Research Paper Doctorate
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Paramilitarism Within Police Organizations and Negative Police Attitudes Towards the Public the Police Must Serve
Research Paper Doctorate
Homer and the Illiad What
Shame and guilt are two feelings that are most of the time misinterpreted to be similar. Despite of the fact that shame and guilt are somehow related, these two feelings have differences in terms of how they affect an…
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Economic Effect of Legalizing Drugs
The program for banning the trading and using of narcotic drugs like cocaine, heroine, and marijuana is one of the most essential public welfare program, attracting so much political discourse on the effectiveness of…
Paper Doctorate
Chicano issues and contemporary perspectives
American society has suffered with the over emphasis on White values and beliefs since its inception. This overemphasis advanced to the point of suffering through a Civil War, a prolonged battle for civil rights, and…