This document discusses several forces and factors that will drive crime and security issues over the coming decades. It identifies (1) massive migration due to globalization, poverty, climate change and population growth, (2) unstable demographics with large youth populations more prone to violence, and (3) increased internal strife within nations as security issues replace conflicts between states. Effective law enforcement and governance will be challenged, while terrorism emanating from the Islamic world may continue due to religious extremism and power vacuums left by declining superpowers.
This document summarizes challenges facing crime and justice in the 21st century. It identifies 7 major forces and factors: 1) increased migration due to globalization, poverty, climate change, and population growth; 2) youth demographics in some nations leading to increased violence; 3) more internal strife and conflict within nations; 4) ineffective security institutions in some countries leading to militias and insurgencies; 5) continued Islamic terrorism from disenfranchised youth and religious extremists; 6) a coming power vacuum as US influence declines; and 7) increased ethnic and religious tensions threatening international cooperation. The document argues criminology must adopt approaches used in medicine like evidence-based practices to address these complex challenges.
This document discusses several key crime and justice challenges facing the world in the 21st century. It identifies factors like migration, youth demographics, internal strife, ineffective security institutions, and Islamic terrorism that will impact crime rates. The author argues that internal violence within nations will increase due to issues like persistent poverty, environmental degradation, and population growth putting pressure on resources. Law enforcement will need to shift from preparing for war between states to policing asymmetric conflicts and building community partnerships. Overall, the challenges outlined could lead to a power vacuum and global instability if not adequately addressed through international cooperation.
Chapter 9 Global Inequality and PovertyONE PHOTO CAPTURES A SH.docxbissacr
Chapter 9 Global Inequality and Poverty
ONE PHOTO CAPTURES A SHARP CONTRAST BETWEEN RICH AND POOR IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD. The high-rise buildings in the background are apartments for the wealthy.
Learning Objectives
1. 9.1Examine how widening gap between rich and poor strengthens inequality-perpetuating institutions
2. 9.2Contrast between the viewpoints of globalists and antiglobalists on the effects of globalization
3. 9.3Examine the causes and the impact of domestic or global inequality between nations
4. 9.4Examine the economic, social, and educational inequality that exists within rich countries
5. 9.5Examine the inequalities that exist in different aspects of life in poor countries
6. 9.6Review the six dimensions of poverty that can be used to gauge poverty
7. 9.7Evaluate some of the measures for diminishing poverty and reducing inequality
The richest eighty people in the world control as much wealth as the poorest half of the world’s population. Thirty-five of those eighty are Americans. The top 1 percent of the world’s richest people control 48 percent of the world’s total wealth. More than one billion people in the world live on less than $1.25 a day. Inequality exists within the United States. The richest four hundred Americans own more assets than the poorest 150 million, or almost half the population. The bottom 15 percent, about forty-six million people, live in households earning less than $22,000 per year. The top 5 percent of households in Washington, D.C., make an average of more than $500,000, while the bottom 20 percent make less than $9,500. Conflict between rich and poor is now the greatest source of tension in American society. Economic inequality has emerged as a dominant global issue that has fueled massive protests and popular uprisings. The global financial crisis and economic recession have rekindled debates about inequality and its consequences. Discussions about wealth and poverty and how to achieve greater equality are as old as human society. They demonstrate a perennial concern about the implications of inequality for the security and well-being of communities. Given the persistence of inequality among individuals, groups, and nations over centuries, this debate is interminable. Struggles to achieve equality are also endless. Issues pertaining to global inequality and poverty permeate almost every significant global problem, from trade to the environment, from terrorism and criminal activities to democratization and human rights, and from ethnic conflicts to the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. As we have seen, popular uprisings in the Middle East and North Africa were strongly influenced by widespread inequality and poverty. Consequently, as our discussion shows, inequality and poverty are closely connected to politics, economics, and culture.
A central question addressed in this chapter is whether inequality matters. Human societies are inherently unequal due to variations of abilities, opportun.
Target Organization List
Organization
Web address
Mission statement
Company 1
Company name:
Contact name (if available):
Description of what the company does:
Location(s):
Web address:
Phone number:
Type of position that you are interested in:
How to apply:
Three things that you learned about the company (this may be mission statement, size, growth potential, community involvement, etc.):
How would this company and job support your career goals?
Company 2
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Three things that you learned about the company (this may be mission statement, size, growth potential, community involvement, etc.):
How would this company and job support your career goals?
1
Article 35
The Price of Progress
John Bodley
In aiming at progress… you must
let no one suffer by too drastic a
measure, nor pay too high a price
in upheaval and devastation, for
your innovation.
Maunier, 1949: 725
UNTIL RECENTLY, GOVERNMENT
planners have always considered eco-
nomic development and progress benefi-
cial goals that all societies should want to
strive toward. The social advantage of
progress—as defined in terms of in-
creased incomes, higher standards of liv-
ing, greater security, and better health—
are thought to be positive, universal
goods, to be obtained at any price. Al-
though one may argue that tribal peoples
must sacrifice their traditional cultures to
obtain these benefits, government plan-
ners generally feel that this is a small
price to pay for such obvious advantages.
In earlier chapters [in Victims of
Progress, 3rd ed.], evidence was pre-
sented to demonstrate that autonomous
tribal peoples have not chosen progress
to enjoy its advantages, but that govern-
ments have pushed progress upon them
to obtain tribal resources, not primarily
to share with the tribal peoples the bene-
fits of progress. It has also been shown
that the price of forcing progress on un-
willing recipients has involved the
deaths of millions of tribal people, as
well as their loss of land, political sover-
eignty, and the right to follow their own
life style. This chapter does not attempt
to further summarize that aspect of the
cost of progress, but instead analyzes the
specific effects of the participation of
tribal peoples in the world-market econ-
omy. In direct opposition to the usual in-
terpretation, it is argued here that the
benefits of progress are often both illu-
sory and detrimental to ...
The document discusses several global problems including overpopulation, environmental pollution, corruption, terrorism, and human rights issues facing women and children. It notes that the world's population has grown rapidly from 500 million in the 17th century to over 7 billion currently. This population growth creates issues around resource allocation, migration, and urbanization. Environmental pollution from industry and vehicles is also discussed as a major problem. Corruption, terrorism, and human rights abuses are identified as additional global challenges.
- Crime rates have been dropping and the economy is booming, yet fear of crime remains a major concern that is exploited for political purposes. Politicians push tough-on-crime policies to appeal to voters' fears despite declining crime.
- Budget cuts to social programs have reduced the safety net for the poor and increased homelessness, pushing some youth into crime out of necessity. At the same time, political efforts criminalize poverty and homelessness.
- Crime is sensationalized by media and politicians to foster demand for harsher laws and policies, even when existing laws could address problems. This "moral panic" is used to pass legislation that primarily serves political rather than practical goals.
This thesis examines corruption in Brazil and whether the country can win the war against it. The author has had extensive experience with poverty, inequality, and corruption in Brazil through his work restructuring companies and combating financial crimes. He witnessed many corruption schemes involving government, Congress, and the judiciary. This motivated him to research the causes and widespread impacts of corruption in Brazil. The thesis will analyze the unique characteristics of corruption in Brazil and contribute empirical findings to further understanding of the country's corruption syndrome.
How COVID-19 is accelerating the change of the World.Pietro Leo
The document discusses how the COVID-19 pandemic is accelerating changes in society and predictions for what may come. Key predictions included more virtual experiences and remote work/education becoming more widely adopted. It was also predicted that governments would take on a stronger role and that citizens may develop a greater priority on health, well-being and being more digital and interconnected. Trust in scientists and experts was expected to increase as well.
This document summarizes challenges facing crime and justice in the 21st century. It identifies 7 major forces and factors: 1) increased migration due to globalization, poverty, climate change, and population growth; 2) youth demographics in some nations leading to increased violence; 3) more internal strife and conflict within nations; 4) ineffective security institutions in some countries leading to militias and insurgencies; 5) continued Islamic terrorism from disenfranchised youth and religious extremists; 6) a coming power vacuum as US influence declines; and 7) increased ethnic and religious tensions threatening international cooperation. The document argues criminology must adopt approaches used in medicine like evidence-based practices to address these complex challenges.
This document discusses several key crime and justice challenges facing the world in the 21st century. It identifies factors like migration, youth demographics, internal strife, ineffective security institutions, and Islamic terrorism that will impact crime rates. The author argues that internal violence within nations will increase due to issues like persistent poverty, environmental degradation, and population growth putting pressure on resources. Law enforcement will need to shift from preparing for war between states to policing asymmetric conflicts and building community partnerships. Overall, the challenges outlined could lead to a power vacuum and global instability if not adequately addressed through international cooperation.
Chapter 9 Global Inequality and PovertyONE PHOTO CAPTURES A SH.docxbissacr
Chapter 9 Global Inequality and Poverty
ONE PHOTO CAPTURES A SHARP CONTRAST BETWEEN RICH AND POOR IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD. The high-rise buildings in the background are apartments for the wealthy.
Learning Objectives
1. 9.1Examine how widening gap between rich and poor strengthens inequality-perpetuating institutions
2. 9.2Contrast between the viewpoints of globalists and antiglobalists on the effects of globalization
3. 9.3Examine the causes and the impact of domestic or global inequality between nations
4. 9.4Examine the economic, social, and educational inequality that exists within rich countries
5. 9.5Examine the inequalities that exist in different aspects of life in poor countries
6. 9.6Review the six dimensions of poverty that can be used to gauge poverty
7. 9.7Evaluate some of the measures for diminishing poverty and reducing inequality
The richest eighty people in the world control as much wealth as the poorest half of the world’s population. Thirty-five of those eighty are Americans. The top 1 percent of the world’s richest people control 48 percent of the world’s total wealth. More than one billion people in the world live on less than $1.25 a day. Inequality exists within the United States. The richest four hundred Americans own more assets than the poorest 150 million, or almost half the population. The bottom 15 percent, about forty-six million people, live in households earning less than $22,000 per year. The top 5 percent of households in Washington, D.C., make an average of more than $500,000, while the bottom 20 percent make less than $9,500. Conflict between rich and poor is now the greatest source of tension in American society. Economic inequality has emerged as a dominant global issue that has fueled massive protests and popular uprisings. The global financial crisis and economic recession have rekindled debates about inequality and its consequences. Discussions about wealth and poverty and how to achieve greater equality are as old as human society. They demonstrate a perennial concern about the implications of inequality for the security and well-being of communities. Given the persistence of inequality among individuals, groups, and nations over centuries, this debate is interminable. Struggles to achieve equality are also endless. Issues pertaining to global inequality and poverty permeate almost every significant global problem, from trade to the environment, from terrorism and criminal activities to democratization and human rights, and from ethnic conflicts to the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. As we have seen, popular uprisings in the Middle East and North Africa were strongly influenced by widespread inequality and poverty. Consequently, as our discussion shows, inequality and poverty are closely connected to politics, economics, and culture.
A central question addressed in this chapter is whether inequality matters. Human societies are inherently unequal due to variations of abilities, opportun.
Target Organization List
Organization
Web address
Mission statement
Company 1
Company name:
Contact name (if available):
Description of what the company does:
Location(s):
Web address:
Phone number:
Type of position that you are interested in:
How to apply:
Three things that you learned about the company (this may be mission statement, size, growth potential, community involvement, etc.):
How would this company and job support your career goals?
Company 2
Company name:
Contact name (if available):
Description of what the company does:
Location(s):
Web address:
Phone number:
Type of position that you are interested in:
How to apply:
Three things that you learned about the company (this may be mission statement, size, growth potential, community involvement, etc.):
How would this company and job support your career goals?
Company 3
Company name:
Contact name (if available):
Description of what the company does:
Location(s):
Web address:
Phone number:
Type of position that you are interested in:
How to apply:
Three things that you learned about the company (this may be mission statement, size, growth potential, community involvement, etc.):
How would this company and job support your career goals?
1
Article 35
The Price of Progress
John Bodley
In aiming at progress… you must
let no one suffer by too drastic a
measure, nor pay too high a price
in upheaval and devastation, for
your innovation.
Maunier, 1949: 725
UNTIL RECENTLY, GOVERNMENT
planners have always considered eco-
nomic development and progress benefi-
cial goals that all societies should want to
strive toward. The social advantage of
progress—as defined in terms of in-
creased incomes, higher standards of liv-
ing, greater security, and better health—
are thought to be positive, universal
goods, to be obtained at any price. Al-
though one may argue that tribal peoples
must sacrifice their traditional cultures to
obtain these benefits, government plan-
ners generally feel that this is a small
price to pay for such obvious advantages.
In earlier chapters [in Victims of
Progress, 3rd ed.], evidence was pre-
sented to demonstrate that autonomous
tribal peoples have not chosen progress
to enjoy its advantages, but that govern-
ments have pushed progress upon them
to obtain tribal resources, not primarily
to share with the tribal peoples the bene-
fits of progress. It has also been shown
that the price of forcing progress on un-
willing recipients has involved the
deaths of millions of tribal people, as
well as their loss of land, political sover-
eignty, and the right to follow their own
life style. This chapter does not attempt
to further summarize that aspect of the
cost of progress, but instead analyzes the
specific effects of the participation of
tribal peoples in the world-market econ-
omy. In direct opposition to the usual in-
terpretation, it is argued here that the
benefits of progress are often both illu-
sory and detrimental to ...
The document discusses several global problems including overpopulation, environmental pollution, corruption, terrorism, and human rights issues facing women and children. It notes that the world's population has grown rapidly from 500 million in the 17th century to over 7 billion currently. This population growth creates issues around resource allocation, migration, and urbanization. Environmental pollution from industry and vehicles is also discussed as a major problem. Corruption, terrorism, and human rights abuses are identified as additional global challenges.
- Crime rates have been dropping and the economy is booming, yet fear of crime remains a major concern that is exploited for political purposes. Politicians push tough-on-crime policies to appeal to voters' fears despite declining crime.
- Budget cuts to social programs have reduced the safety net for the poor and increased homelessness, pushing some youth into crime out of necessity. At the same time, political efforts criminalize poverty and homelessness.
- Crime is sensationalized by media and politicians to foster demand for harsher laws and policies, even when existing laws could address problems. This "moral panic" is used to pass legislation that primarily serves political rather than practical goals.
This thesis examines corruption in Brazil and whether the country can win the war against it. The author has had extensive experience with poverty, inequality, and corruption in Brazil through his work restructuring companies and combating financial crimes. He witnessed many corruption schemes involving government, Congress, and the judiciary. This motivated him to research the causes and widespread impacts of corruption in Brazil. The thesis will analyze the unique characteristics of corruption in Brazil and contribute empirical findings to further understanding of the country's corruption syndrome.
How COVID-19 is accelerating the change of the World.Pietro Leo
The document discusses how the COVID-19 pandemic is accelerating changes in society and predictions for what may come. Key predictions included more virtual experiences and remote work/education becoming more widely adopted. It was also predicted that governments would take on a stronger role and that citizens may develop a greater priority on health, well-being and being more digital and interconnected. Trust in scientists and experts was expected to increase as well.
This document discusses food insecurity issues caused by refugee crises in multiple countries. It provides details on:
1) Lebanon facing economic crisis due to over 1 million Syrian refugees, comprising 25% of population. This puts strain on food supplies and infrastructure.
2) Burkina Faso struggling with 50,000 Malian refugees exacerbating existing food insecurity from drought. Refugee camps put pressure on limited resources.
3) Chad dealing with over 467,000 refugees from Sudan and Central African Republic adding to food supply issues. Local populations also face high malnutrition rates.
The refugee crises have serious economic and social impacts for host countries, worsening preexisting vulnerabilities around food insecurity.
How the Pandemic Has Highlighted Systemic Injustice.pdfEvanGilbertkatz
The COVID-19 pandemic has had a devastating impact on people around the world, but it has also highlighted systemic injustices that have been in existence for years
This document discusses criminal research in the United States. It notes that crime is measured using the Uniform Crime Reporting program and National Crime Victimization Survey. It also discusses trends in violent crime from 2015 to 2016, with increases among males and those aged 25-34. Common crimes during this period included aggravated assault, rape, and burglary. The document also examines social and environmental factors that can influence crime rates, such as discrimination, inequality, poverty, and police policies.
Running head: DISCUSSION 1
DISCUSSION 2
Criminal Research
Alexia Bradley
University of Phoenix, eCampus
AJS 514, Steve Nance
November 13, 2018
Criminal Research
Within the United States of America, crime takes many different forms, but is measured using two statistical programs, and these are the Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Program and the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS). In order for the Bureau of Justice to issue accurate crime reports, a research has to be conducted using these two statistical programs, with special emphasis on the magnitude, nature, and impact of crime in the nation. According to the Bureau of Justice, the hierarchy of crime from highest to lowest is rape, sexual assault, robbery, aggravated assault, simple assault, burglary, motor vehicle theft, and theft (Zhang et al, 2016).
From 2015 to 2016 violent crime increased against males and persons in their mid-20s to mid-30s. Among the male gender, the rate of violent victimization showed an increase from 15.9 per 1,000 males aged 12 years and above to 19.6 per 1,000, which was an alarming piece of realization. Among the people aged 25 years to 34 years, violent victimization showed quite an increase from 21.8 to 28.4 per 1,000 people. In 2016 alone, close to 3 million people experienced crime within a period of six months preceding the period when The Bureau of Justice gave the 2015-2016 crime statistics. Among the most prevalent crimes were aggravated assault, rape or sexual assault and burglary (Zhang et al, 2016).
Some of the social and environmental factors do you believe influence the crime rate include discrimination and inequality. Among the American society, many of the minority groups are labeled as high risk to security, meaning that they are most prone to committing crime.This is because they experience open discrimination that denies them decent opportunities to earn a living like other people. In addition, inequality in income leads to resentments that cause bitterness and instigate conflict between the haves and have-nots, hence the latter attack the former.
Other factors that contribute to crime include poverty and the police policy. Despite the fact that America has some of the world’s richest tycoons, there is also a section of people who live in poverty, and have done so all their life. When people cannot afford basic needs in life, they are tempted to try and intimidate or steal from those who seem to be well of in order to be able to eke a life for themselves and their children. For example, someone whose children have not had supper for two nights may not resist shoplifting (Agnew, 2007).
Uncouth policies adopted by the police in dealing with crime can also be a factor leading to conflict between the locals and the police. Whenever the local community does not support the work of police, there is definitely some level of crime that sinks in the minds of the locals, as some of the people take advantage of the void to carry ou.
Critique Response Sample Summary Response EssaKayla Jones
Here are the key points made in the document:
- Since the Age of Enlightenment, people have emphasized words like "how" and "why" to acquire knowledge.
- There remains an insatiable desire for information and understanding across all disciplines.
- This quest for knowledge through questioning dates back to the Enlightenment era but continues today.
This document discusses barriers faced by individuals with criminal records in obtaining employment, housing, education, and financial stability. It notes that between 70-100 million Americans have a criminal record, and communities of color are disproportionately affected. While policies aim to help with re-entry, further reforms are needed to ensure criminal records do not create lifelong barriers to economic opportunity and mobility. The document recommends policy changes to reduce barriers faced by individuals with criminal histories.
The end of globalization with the new coronavirus pandemicFernando Alcoforado
This article aims to demonstrate that contemporary globalization is threatened due to the continuing depression in the world economy that started in 2008, the pandemic of the new Coronavirus that shook international trade, the dizzying public, family and business indebtedness further aggravated by the pandemic. and the deepening of the economic stagnation that hit the entire world economy. The world faces the prospect of profound change with a return to the national economy that would be self-sufficient. This shift is the exact opposite of globalization. The longer the pandemic lasts, it will compromise globalization and reinforce the discourse of the search for national self-sufficiency.
The document discusses the politics of crime and the emergence of new "moral panics". It argues that while crime rates are dropping, fear of crime is being deliberately fostered and marketed for political gain. Politicians demonize certain groups, like homeless youth, to garner support and pass tough-on-crime laws that have little real impact but satisfy perceptions of wanting more safety and control. The document also summarizes a court case where medical use of marijuana was found to be a constitutionally protected choice.
The 2022 US midterm elections will be highly consequential. They will take place amid accusations of election fraud from both Democrats and Republicans. The results are likely to see Republicans take back control of the House and possibly the Senate. However, neither side will view the results as legitimate, further eroding trust in US political institutions. More importantly, the midterms will set the stage for the 2024 presidential election, in which Donald Trump may run again and potentially dispute the results as he did in 2020, risking a constitutional crisis. The midterms represent a historic tipping point for political polarization and tensions in the US.
The Demographic Transition Theory proposes that populations progress through four stages as countries develop economically: from high birth and death rates to low rates. While this generally occurred in Europe, the theory may not fully apply to Caribbean countries. The Caribbean experienced high birth and death rates in Stage 1, but did not see consistently falling rates as expected in later stages. The theory is too simplistic and Eurocentric to fully capture population changes influenced by factors like education levels, cultural practices, and racial dynamics in the Caribbean. While the theory provides context for historical European trends, it is limited in explaining population changes across diverse societies.
This document provides a critique of modern American society and its economic system. It argues that current economic theories are flawed because they treat natural resources as having monetary value and assume unlimited growth and resources, which is not realistic. As a result, American culture has become overly focused on consumption, greed, and the acquisition of material goods, which has not led to increased quality of life and has contributed to societal problems like crime, pollution, and the breakdown of communities. The document calls for adopting a new economic system based on permanence and sustainability that does not treat the environment as a consumable resource.
This document discusses the major humanitarian food crises caused by civil wars and ethnic conflicts around the world. It focuses on Lebanon as a case study, where the large influx of over 1 million Syrian refugees, about a quarter of Lebanon's population, has severely strained the country's resources and led to widespread food insecurity. The prolonged civil conflict in Syria has displaced millions of people both within Syria and to neighboring countries like Lebanon. The economic costs of civil wars and conflicts are immense for both the countries experiencing the conflicts and those hosting large refugee populations. Addressing these humanitarian crises is crucial to achieving global food security goals.
Eugenics In Canada Essay. Online assignment writing service.Kayleigh Fournier
The document provides instructions for using the HelpWriting.net service to have an essay written. It outlines a 5-step process: 1) Create an account with a password and email. 2) Complete a 10-minute order form providing instructions, sources, and deadline. 3) Review bids from writers and choose one based on qualifications. 4) Review the completed paper and authorize payment if satisfied. 5) Request revisions to ensure satisfaction, with a full refund option for plagiarized work.
The document discusses several risks related to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic in 2022. It argues that China's zero-COVID policy will fail to contain the highly transmissible Omicron variant, leading to larger outbreaks and more lockdowns that severely disrupt the Chinese economy. Supply chain issues caused by China's lockdowns will also persist globally. High inflation due to pandemic-related factors like labor shortages will also be a major economic challenge. The pandemic will further widen inequality between developed and developing nations as wealthy countries receive booster shots while vaccines remain scarce elsewhere. These issues could exacerbate political instability in many countries.
The 2022 US midterm elections will be highly consequential and further divide Americans. Republicans are likely to regain control of Congress, but Democrats may dispute the legitimacy of the results, citing voter suppression. Regardless of the outcome, tens of millions of Americans will view the elections as rigged. The elections will also set the stage for the 2024 presidential race, in which Donald Trump could run again and potentially dispute the results if he loses. The midterms thus represent a tipping point that may undermine trust in US political institutions.
The document discusses several risks related to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic in 2022. It argues that China's zero-COVID policy will fail to contain the highly transmissible Omicron variant, leading to larger outbreaks and more lockdowns that severely disrupt the Chinese economy. Supply chain issues caused by China's lockdowns will also persist globally. High inflation due to pandemic-related factors like labor shortages will also be a major economic challenge. The pandemic will further widen inequality between developed and developing nations as wealthy countries receive booster shots while vaccines remain scarce elsewhere. These issues could exacerbate political instability in many countries.
Appendix a 55 trends now shaping the future of hospitality and travelsuzi smith
THE WORLD’S POPULATION WILL GROW TO 9 BILLION BY 2050.
Early versions of this report predicted that the world’s population would double by 2050, and population growth has proceeded almost exactly on schedule. However, even this estimate may be too low. According to the Center for Strategic and International Studies, most official projections underestimate both fertility and future gains in longevity. Unfortunately, the greatest fertility is found in those countries least able to support their existing people. Populations will triple in the Palestinian Territories and Niger between 2000 and 2050 and will more than double in Yemen, Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Uganda. In contrast, populations in most developed countries are stable or declining. The United States is a prominent exception
1) The document discusses closing the growing technological gap between upper and lower classes to address issues of inequality. It proposes using technology as a tool to decrease financial burdens on lower classes and elevate their living standards.
2) Issues of inequality like those related to social class have historically led to conflicts and revolutions when lower classes feel oppressed without representation. Education is presented as a way to overcome stereotypes and extremism.
3) Solutions proposed include renewable energy, sustainable agriculture, and education to provide skills and moderate cultures while raising standards of living. This may decrease conflicts by addressing root causes of inequality.
globalization project and ppt and pdf internationalRameshwarPagar
This document provides an overview of the political dimensions of globalization. It discusses several threats posed by globalization, including sub-national conflicts, terrorism, authoritarianism, organized crime, corruption, and socio-economic inequality. It also notes some benefits, such as expanded trade and diplomacy. Specific topics covered in more depth include fragile and failed states, global terrorism, authoritarian regimes, international organized crime, corruption, socio-economic inequality, population issues, and environmental threats posed by climate change and resource depletion.
Overcoming WriterS Block For Your College Essays PersTony Lisko
Here are the key points about diagnostic imaging:
- X-rays use electromagnetic radiation to penetrate the body and create images of internal structures on film or screens.
- X-rays are useful for detecting abnormalities like broken bones, tumors, dental issues, and foreign bodies in a non-invasive way.
- Computed tomography (CT) scans combine X-rays with computer technology to produce more detailed cross-sectional images of the body.
In summary, diagnostic imaging techniques like X-rays and CT scans use radiation to safely visualize internal structures and detect any abnormalities without invasive procedures. CT provides especially detailed cross-sectional views enabled by computer processing.
Compare And Contrast College And High School EsTony Lisko
This document provides instructions for creating an account and submitting an assignment request on the website HelpWriting.net. It outlines a 5-step process: 1) Create an account with an email and password. 2) Complete a form with assignment details, sources, and deadline. 3) Review bids from writers and choose one. 4) Review the completed paper and authorize payment. 5) Request revisions until satisfied. The website offers original, plagiarism-free assignments and allows customers to ensure their needs and expectations are met.
Best Markers For Drawing, Doodling And ColoringTony Lisko
The document provides instructions for requesting writing assistance from HelpWriting.net. It outlines a 5-step process: 1) Create an account with an email and password. 2) Complete a 10-minute order form providing instructions, sources, and deadline. 3) Review bids from writers and choose one based on qualifications. 4) Review the completed paper and authorize payment if satisfied. 5) Request revisions until fully satisfied, with a refund option for plagiarized content.
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This document discusses food insecurity issues caused by refugee crises in multiple countries. It provides details on:
1) Lebanon facing economic crisis due to over 1 million Syrian refugees, comprising 25% of population. This puts strain on food supplies and infrastructure.
2) Burkina Faso struggling with 50,000 Malian refugees exacerbating existing food insecurity from drought. Refugee camps put pressure on limited resources.
3) Chad dealing with over 467,000 refugees from Sudan and Central African Republic adding to food supply issues. Local populations also face high malnutrition rates.
The refugee crises have serious economic and social impacts for host countries, worsening preexisting vulnerabilities around food insecurity.
How the Pandemic Has Highlighted Systemic Injustice.pdfEvanGilbertkatz
The COVID-19 pandemic has had a devastating impact on people around the world, but it has also highlighted systemic injustices that have been in existence for years
This document discusses criminal research in the United States. It notes that crime is measured using the Uniform Crime Reporting program and National Crime Victimization Survey. It also discusses trends in violent crime from 2015 to 2016, with increases among males and those aged 25-34. Common crimes during this period included aggravated assault, rape, and burglary. The document also examines social and environmental factors that can influence crime rates, such as discrimination, inequality, poverty, and police policies.
Running head: DISCUSSION 1
DISCUSSION 2
Criminal Research
Alexia Bradley
University of Phoenix, eCampus
AJS 514, Steve Nance
November 13, 2018
Criminal Research
Within the United States of America, crime takes many different forms, but is measured using two statistical programs, and these are the Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Program and the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS). In order for the Bureau of Justice to issue accurate crime reports, a research has to be conducted using these two statistical programs, with special emphasis on the magnitude, nature, and impact of crime in the nation. According to the Bureau of Justice, the hierarchy of crime from highest to lowest is rape, sexual assault, robbery, aggravated assault, simple assault, burglary, motor vehicle theft, and theft (Zhang et al, 2016).
From 2015 to 2016 violent crime increased against males and persons in their mid-20s to mid-30s. Among the male gender, the rate of violent victimization showed an increase from 15.9 per 1,000 males aged 12 years and above to 19.6 per 1,000, which was an alarming piece of realization. Among the people aged 25 years to 34 years, violent victimization showed quite an increase from 21.8 to 28.4 per 1,000 people. In 2016 alone, close to 3 million people experienced crime within a period of six months preceding the period when The Bureau of Justice gave the 2015-2016 crime statistics. Among the most prevalent crimes were aggravated assault, rape or sexual assault and burglary (Zhang et al, 2016).
Some of the social and environmental factors do you believe influence the crime rate include discrimination and inequality. Among the American society, many of the minority groups are labeled as high risk to security, meaning that they are most prone to committing crime.This is because they experience open discrimination that denies them decent opportunities to earn a living like other people. In addition, inequality in income leads to resentments that cause bitterness and instigate conflict between the haves and have-nots, hence the latter attack the former.
Other factors that contribute to crime include poverty and the police policy. Despite the fact that America has some of the world’s richest tycoons, there is also a section of people who live in poverty, and have done so all their life. When people cannot afford basic needs in life, they are tempted to try and intimidate or steal from those who seem to be well of in order to be able to eke a life for themselves and their children. For example, someone whose children have not had supper for two nights may not resist shoplifting (Agnew, 2007).
Uncouth policies adopted by the police in dealing with crime can also be a factor leading to conflict between the locals and the police. Whenever the local community does not support the work of police, there is definitely some level of crime that sinks in the minds of the locals, as some of the people take advantage of the void to carry ou.
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An Essay On Crime And Justice In The 21St Century Ensayo Sobre Crimen Y Justicia En El Siglo XXI
1. Año 2, vol. III agosto-diciembre 2009/Year 2, vol. III August-december 2009
www.somecrimnl.es.tl 1
Fecha de recepción: 05/05/2009
Fecha de aceptación: 10/06/2009
Dr. Chris Eskridge
Universidad de Nebraska
ceskridge@unl.edu
Estados Unidos de América
AN ESSAY ON CRIME AND JUSTICE IN THE 21ST CENTURY
ENSAYO SOBRE CRIMEN Y JUSTICIA EN EL SIGLO XXI
ABSTRACT
There are host of crime and punishment challenges facing the nations of the world at
the outset of this new century, and there seem to be few if any answers. In many
ways, criminologists today are much akin to physicians 200 years ago; we, like they,
have a few ideas, but very little knowledge. Since 1800 however, the field of medicine
has seen nearly incommunicable levels of advancement. Of course death, like crime,
will never be eliminated, but some diseases have been virtually eliminated and the
impact of others significantly reduced, life expectancy has nearly doubled, and the
quality of that life greatly enhanced. If the field of criminology wishes to advance, it
should adopt the same procedural model as utilized by medicine. That procedural
model includes the adoption of cross-national education, the utilization of
2. 2
experimental design and evidence-based evaluation, embracing an inter-disciplinary
perspective, and the integration of scientific criminology with political criminology.
KEY WORDS: Education, Criminology, Pedagogy, Criminal justice.
Multitud de desafíos sobre crimen y castigo enfrentan las naciones del mundo al
comienzo de este nuevo siglo y, al parecer, hay pocas o ninguna respuesta. En muchos
sentidos, los criminólogos de hoy tienen semejanza con los médicos de hace 200 años;
como ellos, tenemos algunas ideas, pero muy poco conocimiento. Desde 1800, sin
embargo, en el campo de la Medicina se han visto incomunicables niveles de avance.
Por supuesto, la muerte y la delincuencia nunca se eliminarán, pero algunas
enfermedades han suprimido virtualmente su impacto de manera significativa, la
esperanza de vida casi se ha duplicado y ha mejorado la calidad de vida útil. Si el
campo de la Criminología desea avanzar, tendrá que adoptar el mismo modelo de
procedimiento utilizado por la Medicina, el cual incluye la adopción de la educación
transnacional, la utilización del diseño experimental y la evaluación basada en la
evidencia, adoptando una perspectiva interdisciplinaria y la integración de la
Criminología Científica con la Criminología Política.
PALABRAS CLAVE: Educación, Criminología, Pedagogía, Justicia.
21ST CENTURY CRIME FORCES AND FACTORS
I have been asked to address to the topic of crime and justice issues in the 21st
century. There are indeed a host of forces and factors on the present and/or near
horizon, many of which are inter-related, that will drive crime and security matters for
decades to come. My laundry list includes the following:
1. Migration - There will be massive migration of individuals across nations and
across continents in this next century, both legal and illegal, and the world will
experience a significant measure of disruption because of it. This will come
about due to a variety of reasons:
A. Globalization - Human capital markets will become increasingly fluid in
a geographic context due to constantly shifting employment supply and
demand needs. Better markets (and better hunting grounds) have
always driven the human race to move, and the globalized economic
system feeds directly into and off of that basic element of human nature.
As an aside, I must mention that globalization and its closely related
cousin, the internet, have and will continue to spawn new kinds of white
collar and economic crimes in this next century;
B. Persistent poverty – One of the dark aspects of globalization, and of
capitalism in general, is the problem of persistent poverty. Those at the
lower end of the economic scale will, in this globalized world, seek job
security and job enrichment in response to their present state of
unemployment/ underemployment, and will move accordingly.
Migration of the poor and disenfranchised from transitional nations into
developed ones is already a political hot button item the world over, and
3. 3
a most profitable market for organized crime. Human smuggling will
become a huge concern for law enforcement in this next century;
C. Rising energy costs/decreased energy access - Individuals will gravitate
to regions where costs are lower and access is greater out of a pure
survival instinct;
D. Environmental degradation and the accompanying famine and overall
health concerns - As agricultural productivity declines and food and
water supplies diminish, masses will flock to regions where basic food,
nutrition and health needs can be met. A 50 percent increase in food
production is needed by 2030, and we are not likely going to see that in
the increasingly erratic and volatile agricultural environment. Consider
the strife and turmoil surrounding the African feminine scenarios of the
last 25 years; multiply that by several fold, and the magnitude of the
problem becomes most overwhelming;
E. Population growth - As implied, the world’s population continues to grow
at what now appears to be an unsustainable rate. As food, water, and
energy supplies become taxed, social peace and basic security may
become undeliverable.
2. Youth demographics - In nations where 40 percent of the population are youth
age 25 and under (the so-called youth bulge), there is a two fold increase in the
probability of a revolution, and a higher than usual rate of violence. Countries
that have significantly more males than female, which obviously presents a
situation where males have a lesser chance of marriage, are more likely to
experience revolution, and have higher violent crime rates. This is known as
the bare branch syndrome. These youth demographics have profound potential
international impacts due to the globalization of trade and commerce. A nation
in the midst of a multi-year spike in violence and/or one experiencing
revolution, will of course be less likely to be engaged in international trade, and
less likely to attract external investment. Interestingly, 21 of the 22 Arabic
League states, most of which are oil producers, are currently dealing with both
of the demographic realities.
3. Internal strife - It is my premise that this next century will see violence
between sovereign states diminish. Violence within nations, however, will
escalate due to many of the factors we are exploring today. The world’s military
units (the U.S. in particular) will need to re-tool themselves, and instead of
preparing for World War III, focus instead on carrying out appropriate
responses to these internally-based, asymmetric conflicts. A new type of law
enforcement will also be needed, a law enforcement geared to policing in
disruptive zones where law and order are not generally present. This new
generation of peacemaking/order-creating police will need to not only maintain
law and order in the present sense, but more importantly help engineer
environments where law and order have a greater long-term presence. They
will need to take on a community building/problem solving orientation. They
will need to partner with civic, business, educational, and religious leaders
within the neighborhoods. Success will be measured not just by standard crime
and victimization rates, but more importantly by other indicators of social
stability such as the establishment of communal institutions, level of citizen
involvement in governance, literacy rates, unemployment rates, high school
4. 4
graduation rates, level of economic growth, illegitimate pregnancy rate,
communal diseases rates, etc.
4. Ineffective government-based security institutions in transitional nations -
When government based security institutions are ineffectual, people tend to
look to extended family, tribal, ethnic, and/or religious entities for protection.
These entities have taken the form of militias and insurgency groups in the
Middle East. They will not go away until the government can provide security,
and even then, since the militias have so firmly established themselves, it will
likely take some years to dismantle them, and the dismantling will of necessity
come via an internal velvet glove, not an external iron fist.
5. Islamic inspired terrorism -Terrorism, emanating from the Muslim world, will
continue to be a geo-political factor for decades to come. There appears to be
two primary sources:
A. The young and disenfranchised who can be turned from terrorism with
hope and legitimate socio-economic opportunity structures;
B. The religious zealots who will not be so easily turned as they wish to
destroy all there is in the West for Allah, who is standing by, even at the
gates, to start a new world, an Islamic world, with the scraps of the old;
C. It is my premise that Islam is now experiencing much the same internal
strife that characterized Western Christianity in the Middle Ages, when
Catholic and Protestants engaged in virtual non-stop war throughout
Europe for hundreds of years, and even exporting the conflict to other
continents as well. We are in for much of the same, but now emanating
from the Islamic community. The real question is whether we, the West,
can absorb form the Islamic East, the same level of blood and horror
that we wreaked upon the world when we were in the midst of our
reformation period. Having said that, there are some promising signs of
progress on the horizon. Operationally, Al-Qaeda for example has been
somewhat quiet of late, it is being ideologically challenged by numerous
Imams and clerics, and polls show a diminished support for Al-Qaeda in
particular and fundamentalism in general among the Arabic body
politic. The proverbial time will tell if these are just short-term
iterations or part of a long-term de-escalation.
6. Power vacuum - The current status of the United States as the world’s sole
superpower, the hyperpower, is clearly coming to an end for a variety of
reasons (debt, loss of moral authority, the “rise of the rest”). What is of concern
is that once that power becomes diminished, the world currently seems poised
to move, not toward a balance of power, but one where there is an absence of
power...a power vacuum, for there is no other entity in place at present to take
the lead. A true power vacuum would be calamitous - religious fanaticism
would emerge, economic stagnation, waning social cohesion, de-globalization,
fear and xenophobia reigning supreme. These are the Dark Age experiences
that such a world would encounter, and it is a sobering notion.
As a counterpoint, there are a host of transnational organizations that,
taken together, have the potential to fill this void; the International Monetary
Fund, the World Bank, the United Nations, the World Trade Organization. At
present, however, these entities are too splintered and more representative of
5. 5
an adolescent in puberty than a mature statesman capable of mitigating
international crises. The contemporary American decline and the coming power
vacuum will clear center stage, however, and it will be most interesting to see
who, if anyone, can step up and hold center court.
I wish to digress for a moment and focus for a few minutes on the much-
discussed topic of decline of America. The American “brand-name” has indeed
been tarnished, economically, diplomatically, morally, and militarily in the past
decade. It has suffered from a disastrous foreign policy, poor government and
private sector fiscal management which has resulted in a weakened dollar and
colossal national and personal debt. It’s international moral and political
leadership has been in a freefall ever since 9/11. In that light, I would like to
make four points:
A. The United States is still the military superpower and will be for
decades to come. There is no military on earth that can match America’s
military technology or firepower. The time, money and expertise needed
to reach that level is out of reach to all but a handful of countries, and
those countries are choosing to spend their time, money and expertise on
industrial growth and domestic development. Consider, for example,
that in 2007, the United States defense budget was nearly $550 Billion.
The second largest defense budget was the UK at $60 Billion, nearly ten
times less. China was third at $58 Billion, the bulk of which covered not
research and development but rather domestic maintenance of its
largest army in the world. Consequently, the U.S. will remain the
world’s sole military superpower for at least another 50 years. However,
the 21st century will see violence between sovereign states diminish and
violence within states escalate in the form of regional and civil conflicts.
The U.S. military is prepared to fight a large-scale international war, a
World War III if you would, and it is not oriented toward regional/civil
war; Consequently, its massive military might in a 21st century context,
will likely prove to be irrelevant;
B. America is, in fact, slipping in every other sphere – moral (particularly
in the aftermath of Iraq, Guantanamo, Abu Ghraib; we have completely
lost our good example), industrial, financial, political, social, cultural.
America’s decline will not be the catastrophic collapse of the Soviet
Union, but more like the British empire’s long ride into the sunset that
began at the end of the previous century. In a positive sense, our
influence, like theirs, will be felt for decades, if not centuries, akin to the
Roman Empire, but our influence is clearly waning;
C. America’s decline is best viewed not in an absolute sense, but rather in a
relative one. The issue is not so much that the U.S. power has subsided,
but rather that there are a host of other nations rising….other nations
are catching up. I turn to my own experience. I lived in the Philippines
in the early 1970s. I returned 30 years later and was shocked by the
progress I saw. The 30 year time frame from 1940 to 1970 saw little or
no economic and social development, but the 30 year time period from
1970 to 2000 saw massive growth, and the Philippines are not even a
good example for they are still a developing nations. Better examples of
“the rise of the rest” as Zakaria describes it, would be Turkey, Brazil, the
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United Arab Emirates, India, Thailand, Taiwan, China, Russia, Chile,
Argentina, many of the former Soviet states that are now in the EU.
There are a host of decidedly modern, peaceful, industrialized states who
have risen into the developed, industrialized ranks, who are producing
top scholars and involved in cutting edge research, who are culturally
absorbing the notion of the rule of law, who have clearly moved to a post-
war orientation, who now have a stake in and rightfully wish to
influence world affairs, and who are ready and totally capable of taking
their place at the table;
D. The United States needs to recognize these changes in the international
landscape and move away from the arrogant, sanctimonious, monologue
diplomacy model that became so particularly prominent in the Bush
years. The Bush administration was a government of zealots and
extremists, belligerently intolerant of those with divergent views, who,
filled with certitude, did not weigh alternative views nor considered the
possibility of personal error. Civilization requires a shunning of
monologue and certitude; its foremost threat, a surplus of both. The
greatest asset the United States possessed in the post World War II era
was its good example. That is now gone, replaced with the nauseating
stench of arrogance and condescending superiority. Such an orientation
is passé, and the United States needs to now engage in a diplomacy of
cooperative dialogue with its accompanying egalitarian orientation.
American has been the rule makes and the enforcer, but has not always
played by those rules. This too needs to end. This will be hard to do for a
nation with a proud sense of deistic manifest destiny, but America’s time
is over. Its manifest destiny has been realized, and the world is now
entering a new phase of global power and influence, a phase where the
U.S. will no longer be dominant… a major player, but no longer
ascendant.
7. Ethnic and religious tension - Ethnic and religious divisions are growing
increasingly pronounced in some quarters, and as a result, the notion of a
cooperative and peaceful international community is increasingly threatened.
The power and influence of fundamentalists of every ilk (Christian, Muslim,
Buddhist, Sikh) cannot be ignored. Fundamentalism by nature advances
monologues and mantras, retreatism, de-globalization, tribal/local/regional
autonomy, the creation of social and cultural enclaves with an extreme focus on
the preservation of identity, independence manifested in the form of isolation,
an irrational demand for absolute sovereignty, culminating in outbreaks of
xenophobia with all its destructive manifestations. By the same token there is
a countervailing force seeking collective governance and cross-national
commerce, trade and social/cultural intercourse. There is tension now, and
there will be tension for centuries to come, between fundamentalism and
globalization, between monologue and dialogue, between the drive for collective
governance, and local sovereignty and retreatism, as there has been in this
world for centuries. The struggle simply continues, with new verses and new
faces.
Longitudinally, I tend to put my faith in the eventual emergence of
collective governance, in enhanced trade and cross-national social and culture
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intercourse, in economic integration, in globalization. In the end, economic
interests will trump belligerence. Economic vibrancy will yield domestic
tranquility. As evidence I offer the past ten years. Over the past decade,
political turmoil has swept the world. There have been the 9/11 attacks,
bombings in Bali, Casablanca, Istanbul, Madrid and London. There have been
two major American-lead wars in Afghanistan and Iraq which have been
protracted and horribly destabilizing. Add to this the war between Israel and
Lebanon, Iran=s bid for regional supremacy, North Korea’s nuclear sword-
rattling, the Chinese-Tibet crisis, Russia’s continuing clashes with its
neighbors. Yet, during this same period, the world economy has experienced
unprecedented growth. We are experiencing today something that has not
happened in recorded history - simultaneous growth worldwide. The U.S.,
Europe and Japan are doing well, but so is China, and India and Brazil and
Argentina and Chile and Turkey and Thailand and the United Arab Emirates.
Their rise is powering the new global order.
Globalization is more powerful, widespread and resilient than even the
economists realized. It is amazingly elastic, but, we should probably not be so
surprised, for globalization in micro appeals to the individual interests of the
world’s body politic who see it as a way out, a way for them and for their
families to move forward. There are, in point of fact, massive numbers of
persons, entire nations visualizing hope en mass for the first time in human
history. That power will trump civic strife and turmoil in the end. There will be
more body bags, too many more, but the spirit of globalization has reached the
four corners of this globe. It has been universally embraced, and as previously
noted, that genie will not be put back into the bottle. While globalization has
some decidedly negative impacts, I see it, in sum total, as a mitigating factor to
many of the global crime problems of the 21st century.
8. I have an additional thought on this matter. One particular family of collateral
demands of globalization is the entire notion of civic stability and order; the
establishment of a genuine rule of law, creation, growth and development of
equitable and efficient institutions of public order and dispute resolution,
conformity to international trade norms, rational governance, and political
transparency. These will simply be demanded, as without them, a nation will
be decidedly handicapped as it attempts to compete in the global economy,
which is a reason to simultaneously embrace justice education, but more on
that later.
9. A rise in nationalism - This has been a sleeping phenomenon for the last half-
century. As economic fortunes rise, so inevitably will nationalism, and also
inevitably will some of the negative aspects of nationalism. Pride, an interest in
attaining international recognition and respect, frustrated over having been
forced to accept an American narrative of world events for so long, aggravated
with having been cast as bit players for so long and accompanied by the
concurrent drive to now have a viable seat at the table, a desire to right historic
wrongs; these are all factors that will aggravate the issue. Newly arising
nations are going to be strongly assertive of their ideals and interests. How are
we going to get so many actors to work together? As mentioned a moment ago,
the traditional mechanisms of international cooperation are fraying, and are
nearly all out of step with the times. The G8 does not include China, India or
Brazil. The IMF is always headed by a European, the World Bank by an
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American. These country club ideals are passé, but finding a way, finding
mechanisms that can include more countries and more NGOs as viable and
empowered players with a seat at the table will be hard, but it does need to be
done. If China, India, Brazil, Thailand, etc. all have a contributing stake in the
world order, there will be less chance of war, depression, and general social
unrest, and less chance of unbridled nationalism raising its ugly head. But,
that is not the only answer, for some may have a seat at the table and still
want more power. Then of course there are those nations that will feel left out,
cheated, betrayed, and the negative aspects of nationalism will be easily fanned
into flames by opportunistic politicians in such settings. Heaven forbid that
another Hitler arrive on the world scene, especially in this nuclear age.
10. I would note that we are already seeing some of the negative elements of
nationalism emerge in several countries. North Korea is certainly one example,
where nationalism is being driven by an internal engine of propaganda,
isolation, and hero worship, and with nuclear warheads on the table, this
nationalistically driven state cannot be taken lightly. Then there are several
nations (Russia, Venezuela, Iran), all empowered and embolden by oil wealth,
that are rattling the saber of forward-leaning, self-serving nationalism, to the
current and potential further detriment to communal peace and prosperity of
their neighbors. Note that all of these nations are currently headed by a
propaganda spouting sole ruler who is plucking at the nationalistic
heartstrings of his body politic as a means of staying in power. Whatever the
factors, and there will be unique justifications and motives based on
contingencies of the moment, customs, and cultures, the 21st century will see
the re-emergence of the negative side of nationalism, and the world community
will need to contend with its potentially destructive ramifications.
11. Organized crime - I add to this list the usual suspect of organized crime with all
its offerings - drugs, arms, prostitution, money laundering, human trafficking,
production and distribution of counterfeit goods, and organized crime’s Siamese
twin, government corruption. There is strong evidence that organized crime
entities around the globe are beginning to build partnerships in a classic
division of labor context. Globalization’s impact in illegitimate trade and
commerce is just as vibrant and dynamic as it is in the legitimate. Law
enforcements fragmented responses will be no match.
Middle class revolt - I see on the horizon, some social unrest percolating
from the middle class sector of the industrialized nations as social welfare
commitments go unmet. We are a few years away yet, but I think this has the
potential for some serious social disruption.
The seemingly endless cycle of interpersonal violence - As a former
criminal investigator, I am personally concerned with the seemingly eternal
cycle of violence that is settling in to many communities, especially in those
nations with high socio-economic inequity coefficients. The child abuse and
spousal abuse that runs from one generation to the next to the next is most
distressing.
12. The overuse of prisons – I wish to add as item #12, the truly irrational and
utterly counterproductive over use of prisons particularly in the United States,
which is contributing significantly to the crime problem, both in the short term
and in the long term. A full 25 percent of the world’s prison population is in the
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United States, and this is contributing to the American crime problems, not
mitigating it.
MEDICAL ANALOGY
As I looked over this list, I thought of myself for a moment, not as a criminologist, but
rather as a physician, and instead of addressing crime problems, addressing medical
problems, and not of the 21st century, but rather of the 19th century. And the reason I
draw this analogy is that I believe that the field of criminology today is very much like
the field of medicine 200 years ago. There were seemingly insurmountable health
issues then, as there are seemingly insurmountable crime problems today…small pox,
bubonic plague, malaria, infections, consumption, scurvy. There was a lot of
guesswork in medicine in 1800, a very limited epistemological understanding, no body
of knowledge of consequence, no consistently proven treatment modalities. What did
medicine do to move from where it was then, when life, as Thomas Hobbes wrote, was
nasty, brutish and short (short indeed as life expectancy at the time was roughly 40
years of age) to the situation of today. Death has not been eliminated, and yes, there is
still some guesswork in medicine, but there is a body of knowledge today, there is
epistemological understanding, there are hundreds and hundreds of proven, successful
treatment modalities, many of life’s serious diseases have been eliminated and the
severity of the nature of disease in the aggregate has been significantly mitigated. Life
expectancy has been extended to nearly 80 years of age in the developed nations, and
it is a markedly improved quality of life in the health context. What has happened?
What accounts for this progress? What can we in criminology learn? The field of
Medicine did four things:
1. It moved toward a ubiquitous, cross-national educational model. Schools of
medicine have sprouted up in quality institutions of higher education the world
over in the last 200 years and there is an extensive amount of professional
cooperation, interaction and exchange.
2. It adopted the principle of experimental design and evidence-based evaluation.
3. It embraced an inter-disciplinary perspective and sought intellectual
conciliance, combining different types, levels, and areas of exploration in an
attempt to etiologically explain and understand. It is not unusual today to see
an article in a medical journal authored by half-a-dozen researchers from half-
a-dozen different disciplines (and from half-a-dozen different institutions, per
point #1).
4. It integrated scientific inquiry with the political. Medicine realized that it
needed to get its message out to the masses to realize real preventative and
curative progress.
I wish to return to the theme that there are great parallels between medicine
and criminology. We in criminology cannot eliminate crime anymore than physicians
can eliminate death, but we can, like medicine, reduce the severity of the nature of
crime through preventative and curative mechanisms, just as medicine can reduce the
severity of disease through preventative and curative means.
There was little understanding in 1800 that different diseases needed different
treatments, and that different people with the same diseases sometimes needed
different treatments. There was no understanding as to the difference between a
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bacteria based and a viral based disease. But, once the four basic premises were
implemented (cross national education, experimental design, interdisciplinary
orientation, political medicine), and once Louis Pasteur came along, the field of
medicine exploded. No, it cannot nor ever will eliminate death, we cannot eliminate
crime, but we both can reduce the severity of the nature of crime and disease, and we
can do so by embracing the four principles - cross national education, experimental
design, interdisciplinary orientation, political criminology. Improvements in crime and
punishment matters and the reduction of corruption throughout the world in the 21st
century, depend upon criminology moving in this same strategic direction. As the
American writer Ralph Waldo Emerson once wrote, for every 100 people hacking at
the leaves, there is only one digging at the root of the problem. We cannot address the
crime problems by hacking at the leaves in a piecemeal fashion. We need to come at
this from a fundamental, etiological, epistemological, systemic orientation and adopt
the same procedural model as did medicine. I wish to briefly address all four
procedural methodologies which medicine embraced, and apply them to criminology:
CROSS NATIONAL CRIMINOLOGY EDUCATION
We need to embrace a cross national educational model, and seek to enhance the level
of growth and development of criminology in universities throughout the world. I see
three major benefits to this, as follows:
1. Over time, graduates from university justice education programs will gradually
begin to fill justice system positions within their respective countries, which
will help to further professionalize justice operations within each country.
2. Most who take university classes in criminology will not seek employment in
the justice system per se, but they become the body politic, and their exposure
to the principles and concepts outlined in their criminology classes will have
increased their understanding as to the proper role and function of the justice
system and its personnel. Subsequently this more attuned and aware general
populous will hold justice system personnel to a higher standard. The synergy
of this proposal is that the justice system personnel who are going to be held
more accountable by the more attuned public, will have had the academic
background to draw upon which will give them more tools to be able to respond
positively.
3. Justice officials will also be able to respond more positively to increased public
demand due to perhaps the most important aspect of all - research. The faculty
and students of the criminology programs will engage in research activities
that will produce a more complete knowledge base and shed further light on
ways and means of improving justice system practices, programs and policies.
In sum, criminology research helps develop and improve justice-based
institutional structures, the classroom course content helps prepares the individuals
who work in them and ingrains the concept of the justice and the rule of law into the
body politic. I defer to the thoughts of H. G. Wells in this matter – “human history is a
race between education and catastrophe.” Under that premise, it is crucial that the
educational model be adopted, and particularly in the area of criminology as nations
seek to enhance the level of collective communal peace and equality, and overall social
justice.
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I would add that developing and transitional nations in particular need to
establish justice education programs. These nations typically have weak rule of law
traditions and publically disparaged legal infrastructures. Justice education programs
will help overcome these deep-seated problems, and in addition, it will help these
nations professionalize and stabilize their justice systems so that they will be more
likely to attract investment dollars and participate more fully in the global economy.
AN INTERDISCIPLINARY ACADEMIC MODEL
The hard sciences and medicine were two of the great success stories of the 20th
Century. Conspicuously absent in this great leap, however, were the social and
behavioral sciences. Some twenty years ago, Allan Bloom (1987) criticized the
academic social and behavioral sciences for being scholastically stagnant. He argued
that there have been no new ground breaking perspectives, no new paradigms, no
theories of value or impact proffered for decades. Compared with the hard sciences
and medicine, the traditional disciplines of sociology, psychology, anthropology,
economics, history, political science are comatose, if not all together dead. The primary
reason he argues, is intellectual incest; an unwillingness to engage in cross
disciplinary and cross national fertilization and exchange.
Much of the reason behind the rather rapid rise of justice education as a field of
study in the United States has been its cross disciplinary diversity. A marginal field of
study in the l960s and l970s, it exploded onto the academic scene in the 1980s and
l990s. This was due in part to the emergence of crime as a fundamental topic of
interest to the American body politic, but also in large part due to its academic
diversity and multi disciplinary character. It is not unusual to see American
university criminal justice program faculty members with degrees in history,
psychology, sociology, public administration, law, political science, urban studies, as
well as criminology and criminal justice.
There is a need to continue to cling to the multi disciplinary model, and to extend
the reach to include colleagues from all nations. We must emulate the progressive
hard science research centers and reach out to all fields and disciplines, and to
colleagues from all nations, and in this interdisciplinary, cross-national context,
collectively seek to address crime and justice issues.
EVIDENCE BASED CRIMINOLOGY
What do we know about reducing the severity of crime? How do we go about
systemically reducing the severity of crime? A comprehensive United States Congress
sponsored study undertaken about ten years ago concluded that we simply do not
know. What we do know and where we have made great strides, is in enhancing the
efficiency and the professionalism of our justice agencies. American law enforcement
in particular has seen a light year of improvement in the last 40 years. This has been
due, in large part, to the presence of criminology/criminal justice programs in the U.S.
higher educational system – there are now better prepared recruits, a heightened
sense of awareness and demand for proper performance coming from the educated
body politic, and a growing body of research-based knowledge that has examined
police (and other) justice agency operations and procedures.
What we don’t know is how to systemically reduce the severity of crime and
deviance overall in society at large. Some programs and policies seem successful,
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others are clearly dismal failures, but we are not sure why, on either count. We have
not been able to crack the cause and effect barrier with any degree of surety. The
knowledge base in the field of criminology is somewhat thin as compared with the
hard sciences.
As a consequence, justice policies and programs that are adopted are generally
implemented due more to political consideration rather than scientific merit. In the
final analysis, academic criminology is generally polluted by political criminology, for
in the absence of sound knowledge, public policy tends to be a pinch of science (and
often bad science at that), and a pound of ideology.
SCIENTIFIC VERSUS POLITICAL CRIMINOLOGY
This then brings me to the 4th and final, and yes, somewhat cynical point, scientific
versus political criminology. Let me address that idea and tie it in with the other
notions presented today, with two stories. In 1799, the former president of the United
States, George Washington, lay in bed with a bad case of strep throat. The finest
physicians of the day concluded that he needed to be bled, a common treatment
modality of the day that was used for virtually every ailment. Bleeding, among other
impacts, contributes to dehydration. Ironically in the end, Washington died not due to
the strep throat infection per se, but primarily due to the complications brought on by
the bleeding induced dehydration. We know today that when a patient contracts a case
of strep throat, they need to be hydrated, not de hydrated. Yet ironically, the well-
meaning physicians of the day, using the popular mode of treatment, did exactly the
opposite of what they needed to do and of course made the situation worse.
There is, in this story, a stunning analogy with respect to the use of prisons in an
American context. Just as bleeding was used as the response to virtually all ailments
of the early 19th century and just as it made things worse, prison is used as the
response to virtually all crimes in the 21st century, and is making things worse; strep
throat, consumption, the plague…bleed them – drug user, burglar, robber…imprison
them. Just as medicine in that day had no concept of inter and intra disease specificity
and the need for individualized treatment modalities, we in criminology also suffer
today with an inability to deal with inter and intra crime variation.
Had George Washington’s health improved (and there was a chance it could have
for he was a man of large stature), the physicians likely would have suggested it was
due to the bleeding, and perhaps touted his case as yet another example of the value of
that treatment modality. But of course, such treatment is de habilitating, and any
improvement in Washington’s health subsequent to the bleeding would have been
despite, not because of the treatment received. A systematic analysis would have
revealed this to be the case of course, but, there were few systematic analyses
undertaken within the field of medicine prior to the 1800s.
By in large, the crime prevention programs that we utilize in the United States
have not been systematically evaluated. Quite an interesting state of affairs. Imagine
a pharmaceutical firm introducing a new drug into the market that has not been
adequately tested and approved by the Food and Drug Administration. We need a
criminological FDA. No crime response or prevention program should be implemented
until it has been adequately tested, until it has been subjected to repeated, thorough,
systematic quantitative evaluation, and one way to facilitate this is to develop justice
education programs in universities all around the world.
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We should also consider the fact that there are programs that have been shown
via systematic evaluation to be viable, but are not politically palatable. This situation
is not limited to criminology. Consider, for example, the case of Dr. Joseph Goldberger,
sent by the United States government to the southern American states in 1913 in an
attempt to discover the cause and cure for pellagra, a disease that was ravaging that
area of our nation. He discovered that the disease was due to a lack of niacin in the
diet. Dr. Goldberger, a Jew from the northern United States, then began to relay his
findings to the southern community populous and leadership. His work was
summarily rejected, due in part to the fact that he was a Jew, in part due to the fact
that he was from the North, and in part because of a general fear of change, a
xenophobia amongst the populous. He was eventually recalled by the United States
federal government due to the animosity spreading throughout the American South on
this matter. He died, definitively knowing he had found the cause and cure of pellagra,
but infinitely frustrated in that he had been unable to reach the body politic with the
findings.
This account highlights the need for scientific criminologists to recognize that
there are actually two fields that need to be surmounted if impact is to be achieved...
Scientific criminology and political criminology. As quantitatively sound as it is,
removing handguns from the American public is just not going to happen, despite the
fact that a successfully implemented policy of this nature would result in fewer
murders. As quantitatively sounds as it is, the horribly unbalanced social inequality
quotient is not going to be addressed in America, despite the fact that this is clearly a
precipitating factor when it comes to crime issues. There is no political capital for
seriously addressing either notion in the United States.
CONCLUSIONS
Criminology today, like medicine 200 years ago, is faced with a literal plethora of
concerns, and only if it adopts the same procedural model as medicine (cross national
education, experimental design, interdisciplinary orientation, a focus on the political
as well as the scientific), will we see progress. I do call upon you to markedly increase
the presence of criminology in the colleges and universities in your country as a first
step. If you are serious about enhancing justice, about heightening the sense of peace
and improving socio-economic stability, about obtaining more external investment,
about reducing corruption, you need to bring justice education programs to your
universities. It may take a generation to have the desired impact, but this will work.