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Criminal justice: the essentials PDF

288 Pages·2013·2.095 MB·English
by  LabSteven P
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Criminal Justice (cid:2) This page intentionally left blank Criminal Justice Th e Essentials THIRD EDITION (cid:2) STEVEN P. LAB Bowling Green State University MARIAN R. WILLIAMS Appalachian State University JEFFERSON E. HOLCOMB Appalachian State University MELISSA W. BUREK Bowling Green State University WILLIAM R. KING Sam Houston State University MICHAEL E. BUERGER Bowling Green State University 1 Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University’s objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide. Oxford New York Auckland Cape Town Dar es Salaam Hong Kong Karachi Kuala Lumpur Madrid Melbourne Mexico City Nairobi New Delhi Shanghai Taipei Toronto With offi ces in Argentina Austria Brazil Chile Czech Republic France Greece Guatemala Hungary Italy Japan Poland Portugal Singapore South Korea Switzerland Th ailand Turkey Ukraine Vietnam Copyright © 2013, 2011, 2008 by Oxford University Press For titles covered by Section 112 of the US Higher Education Opportunity Act, please visit www.oup.com/us/he for the latest information about pricing and alternate formats. Published by Oxford University Press 198 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10016 www.oup.com Oxford is a registered trademark of Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of Oxford University Press. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Criminal justice: the essentials / Steven P. Lab . . . [et al.].—3rd ed. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-19-993589-5 (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Criminal justice, Administration of— United States. I. Lab, Steven P. HV9950.C743248 2014 364.973—dc23 2012043669 Printing number: 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper CONTENTS preface vii Chapter 1 Crime, Criminal Justice, and Policy 1 Chapter 2 Issues of Law 24 Chapter 3 Policing and Law Enforcement 49 Chapter 4 Th e Court System 82 Chapter 5 Institutional Corrections 119 Chapter 6 Community Corrections 154 Chapter 7 Th e Juvenile Justice System 186 Chapter 8 Conclusion 223 Glossary 229 Bibliography 253 Index 267 v This page intentionally left blank PREFACE U ndertaking a revision of this text has proven to be a diffi cult task. For those who have ever done a book revision it is hard enough when it is a compre- hensive work of many hundreds of pages. Th en when you need to remove material or add more material, there is more to work with and more pages to fi ll. Th e book was originally written to off er an alternative to the expense tomes that are most intro books. We intended to off er the essential facts as succinctly as possible and keep the costs down for students. Th e success of the fi rst two editions attest to the fact that we succeeded in that endeavor. Revising that work, however, leaves us lit- tle to cut and little room in which to add new material. In this third edition we have made what changes we can without losing the intent of the fi rst two editions. Th is has been accomplished in two primary ways. First, we have revised each chapter. We have cut some material, updated other material, and added some new topics. Second, we have attempted to pro- vide instructors and students with a wealth of information on the text’s web site. Th e site provides access to documents, tables, fi gures, and other materials that we could not fi t in the text but we felt was important to provide the readers. Th ere are also self-quizzes for the students, glossary fl ashcards, and suggested web sites and resources. We have referenced a great deal of this in the text. NEW TO THIS EDITION • Each chapter is introduced with a list of things the reader should be able to do aft er reading the material • Critical thinking exercises have been revised and new exercises added • Each chapter includes Web Activities that direct the reader to resources either on the books dedicated web-site or at a wide range of government and private sites • All the material has been updated to refl ect the most recent data available vii viii PREFACE • Chapter 2 has greatly revised materials on the war on terrorism, criminal liability, cybercrime, and the bill of rights, as well as removing boxes on the Martha Stewart case and the bill of rights. • Material on professional policing has been shortened and that on the community policing era have been revised in Chapter 3. A number of other discussions have been shortened in order to add totally revised section on future issues on policing that are emerging today. • In Chapter 4, several boxes have been deleted. Th e existing section on Trends in the Court System has been revised and moved to the end of the chapter. Sections on the use of technology and jury consultants have been added. • Chapter 5 has added a section on a new era in corrections and the use of private corrections in a post 9/11 era. • Changes in Chapter 6 include a major revision to the discussion on contemporary community corrections, new material on restorative justice, major changes to the discussion of community supervision and intermediate sanctions, and an updated discussion of community supervision eff ectiveness. • Chapter 7 has removed several boxes and replaced them with in-text discussions, made changes to the discussion of delinquency measures, added material on teen and drug courts, revised the discussion on attorneys in juvenile court, shortened the discussion of juvenile correctional approaches, and rewritten the discussion of youthful gangs. • Th e fi nal chapter has added an entire section on fi scal austerity and the criminal justice system. Despite the fact that there is a lot of good material on the web site, the book is a work in itself and can be used without the web materials. It is up to the readers and instructors whether to use the materials on the web or not. Hopefully, whether you use just the printed work or both the book and the materials on the web, you will fi nd the material useful and informative. As always, please feel free to let us know what you think about the work and pass on your suggestions for future editions. It is through your help that we can make the work responsive to your needs. Of course, we will assume the responsi- bility for any fl aws. As long as we can remain true to the original goal of an inex- pensive alternative to introductory tomes, we will strive to meet your needs. Steven P. Lab CHAPTER 1 (cid:2) Crime, Criminal Justice, and Policy CHAPTER OUTLINE What Is Crime? Criminal Justice System Policy What Is Policy? Criminal Justice System Philosophy Th e Classical School Th e Positivist School Retribution Deterrence Rehabilitation Incapacitation Measuring Crime Offi cial Statistics Self-Report Statistics Victimization Studies A System of Checks and Balances Individual Liberty versus Societal Civility Crime Control versus Due Process Other Competing Ideologies A Loosely Coupled System Discretion Th e Four Cs of the Criminal Justice System (Citizens, Cops, Courts, and Corrections) Recent Trends in Criminal Justice Conclusion Key Words Suggested Readings 1 2 CRIMINAL JUSTICE After reading this chapter, you should be able to • Defi ne deviance • Provide examples of informal social control • Defi ne and diff erentiate between mala in se and mala prohibita • Defi ne public policy • Discuss how policies are created • Demonstrate knowledge of the classical and positivist schools of crimi- nal justice • Defi ne and discuss retribution • Discuss deterrence and its diff erent types • Discuss the rehabilitation approach to crime • Defi ne incapacitation • Identify three methods for measuring crime and discuss each • Explain what is meant by crime rate • Discuss NIBRS and how it diff ers from the UCR • Discuss the NCVS • Relate the diff erences between crime-control and due-process models of justice • Show how the criminal justice system is actually a loosely coupled system • Defi ne discretion and its importance to criminal justice • List the four Cs of the criminal justice system • Point out how each of the four Cs is an important decision-making com- ponent of the criminal justice system • Explain the courtroom work group • Discuss the due-process revolution • Discuss the civil rights movement and its impact on criminal justice • Identify diff erent emerging trends in the criminal justice fi eld INTRODUCTION Crime and societal responses to crime present considerable problem in most soci- eties. Th is chapter introduces some fundamental concepts concerning crime and criminal justice policy. First, crime and deviance are reviewed. Policy, the method by which problems are addressed, and the notion of criminal justice policy are dis- cussed. Th e chapter then presents the diff erent and sometimes contradictory phi- losophies of criminal justice (the Classical and Positivist schools, and retribution,

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