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    Campus Security Act

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    have all shown that most of the criminal based activities within the campus were from students without and trace of a criminal history. These reports show that in fact most colleges are safe and there are rare occurrences of violent crimes, which this act was targeted towards. According to the U.S. Department of Education (2001), the overall rate of criminal homicide at colleges and universities was .07 per 100,000 students compared to a rate of 14.1 per 100,000 young adults in society-at-large. Violent

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    The Social Security Act

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    Introduction A. National Scale In the United States, child support is court mandated and requires the non-custodial parent of a minor or minors to make payments to ensure that their child is financially taken care of. Title IV-D of the Social Security Act requires that all States establish a comprehensive program which works to locate non-custodial parents of children receiving welfare and to obtain child support from any parents located (Saltzman, Furman, and Ohman, 2014). Many incarcerated offenders

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    The Social Security Act

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    Title XIX of the Social Security Act (Title XIX) included the regulations and implementation standards for Medicaid. Medicaid is a federal program that was established in 1965 under the Title XIX law. This law detailed and described the roles of both the federal and state government in the administration of Medicaid. Federal laws outlined the overall components of the program with mandated and optional inclusions: payment limits, beneficiary eligibility requirements, amount of coverage for medical

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    Immigration Services (USCIS) assumed accountability for the immigration service occupations of the federal government. The Homeland Security Act of 2002 pulls apart the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) and detached the agency into three modules within the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). The Homeland Security Act created USCIS to develop the security and efficiency of national immigration services by converging exclusively on the administration of value applications. The law also

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    Debates over Social Security have been ongoing since its inception in 1935 until today. The trend seems to be toward an increasing percentage of the American public, across party and demographic lines, in favor of strengthening Social Security funding, and a willingness to pay more to preserve and even improve benefits. However, what is not clear is whether Americans favor privatization of Social Security because of fears that the Social Security Trust Fund is living on borrowed time. The

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    Pentagon, as well as the 2001 anthrax scares, Congress proposed the USA PATRIOT Act. Supporters of the Act cite the importance and immeasurable need for greater protection in terms of national security, which is the government’s responsibility first and foremost to protect its citizens from enemies foreign and domestic. However, for every proponent there is an equally passionate opponent who partially believe not only does the Act impede on civil liberties and individual rights but was an opportunistic

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    Obstruct Terrorist Act (also known as the USA PATRIOT Act) and the Homeland Security Act. Many individual feel that these two policies have infringed the rights of the American people, while others believe that these infringements are a necessity to ensure the safety of the people. This paper will explore if in fact these two policies are unreasonably and unjustly infringing on the rights of the American People, and how it effect the social justice system in America The USA PATRIOT Act was signed into

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    Social Security Act of 1935. The Social Security Act also known as SSA, programs were developed to protect individual families from income loss due to unemployment, sickness, old age, death, and to improve citizens’ welfare ("Why Social Security?"2015). Through public service and economic assistance, with a task of raising a family. Although this left a huge impact on America's society that changed everyone's life. In 1929 an event triggered to a change in America's economic life(Social Security Act"2015)

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    passing of the Securities Act of 1933. Shortly followed by the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the creation of the Securities and Exchange Commission. “The Securities Act of 1933 was the first federal legislation used to regulate the stock market” (Investopedia). This Act was to prevent fraud and require investors to have access to a company’s financial records. As well, the Act of 1933 required all securities sold, within the United States, to be registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission

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    The Securities Exchange Act of 1934 JFM GM520 - Legal Political & Ethical Dimensions of Business April, 12 2010 The Securities Exchange Act of 1934 was passed by congress to strengthen the government’s control of the financial markets. It was preceded by the Securities Exchange Act of 1933 which was enacted during the Great Depression in hopes that the stock market crash of 1929 would not be repeated. The basic difference between the two acts was that the 1933 Act was to govern the

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