Criminal Justice Essay

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    the ethics of a criminal justice agency listed in the text is that of accountability to the public (Cronkhite, 2013). This type of accountability is mirrored in the Seattle Police Department’s code of ethics. When the code of ethics speaks of justice, both racially and socially, the department recognizes the accountability that it holds to the community (Seattle Police Department Code of Ethics, 2015). Essentially, this is the recognition that police departments, or criminal justice agencies in general

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    Available research in the Critical criminal justice issues: Task force reports, shows that the crime associated with drugs has not diminished despite increasingly punitive local, State, and Federal Government interventions and social control (1996). On the contrary, these social issues have shown an increase in the midst of an increasing and costly “war on drugs”. It is obvious that the current correctional system is not correcting anything. The rising number of incarcerated and recidivism does not

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    Canadian society and have seeped into the Canadian criminal justice system. The racialization of crime, discriminatory policing, minority overrepresentation in prison populations and a blatant denial of justice are aspects of the system that taint much of its past and create a worried present. This paper argues against the prevalent Canadian defence of egalitarianism by establishing the presence of systemic discrimination within the Canadian criminal justice system. Whether it is through print or through

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    Crime and the Criminal Justice System The criminal justice system and the process have molded the laws of the United States to its current existence. The judicial system is designed to punish those who commit crimes against one another and for those who break the laws in other ways. According to Pearson (2012), crime can be defined as conduct in violation of the state, the federal government, or a local jurisdiction for which there is no legally acceptable justification or excuse. Pearson (2012)

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    Discretion, undoubtedly plays a massive role and is implemented in various aspects of the system. But what is discretion? Discretion, as defined in Canadian Criminal Justice: A Primer, is merely the freedom to choose among different options when confronted with the need to make a decision. As significant part of the criminal justice system in Canada, being a police officers “involves the use of a significant amount of discretion” (McKillop & Pfeifer, 2004) . Due to the portrayal of the police by

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    The criminal justice system has been around for thousands of years. It has not always been as formal and structured as it is today, but has been a constant part of society nonetheless. As nations and societies have changed, so has the criminal justice system present within each nation or society. Customs and laws have affected the punishments and procedures observed in criminal justice systems all over the world as certain punishments or laws set in one society may not apply to another society.

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    that so many had worked for, reshaping the American criminal justice system to provide legal covers for terror against African Americans and to preserve black inferiority. In the mid-1800s, if African Americans refused or could not show proof of gainful employment, they would be charged with vagrancy and put on the auction block with their labor sold to the highest bidder (Anderson 19). From the Reconstruction Era to the late 1960s, criminal justice has been one of the greatest civil rights crises

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    Today the United States of America is globally ranked nineteenth in the top one hundred countries today for their criminal justice systems. Our country's police,courts, and correction systems are one of the best in the world. Each one of these systems has special functions and parts in America’s criminal justice system. America's police system is separated into four different agencies such as local police, state police, highway patrol, special jurisdiction police, and deputy sheriffs. “Today's

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    Many Americans view the criminal justice system as a beneficial resource our country provides to ensure safety and general welfare of the people. While this notion may have been the initial intent, the United States justice system is extraordinarily biased and is failing at lowering crime rates. Criminal punishment in America is not based by intensity of the crime committed, but instead is determined by social status. The higher the class of the individual, the easier said individual will be punished

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    For some time now, the Japanese criminal justice system has been regarded or perceived to be a successful justice system model. The success is mainly attributed to Japan’s culture and even embedded in the language itself (Goold, 2004). The success has drawn interest among criminology scholars and practitioners either for the purpose of broadening their knowledge or to emulate its criminal justice system (Ebbe, 2000). The interest is based on statistical data that indicate low levels of criminality

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