YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Law Enforcement Recruitment Challenges
Essays 301 - 330
element introduced when Utah encounters Bodhi, and is made to consider rather deeper philosophical aspects of life than the straig...
Discretion, 2003). In his acclaimed study of discretion, University of Chicago law professor Kenneth Culp Davis discovered that p...
(authoritarian and conservative) that attract them to police work and that their personalities shape the work they do. The other ...
up the incident. While the precedent makes for an exciting police drama, the reality is that corruption does exist and New Jersey ...
definition of excessive force is, "the use of any more force than a highly skilled officer should find necessary to use in that pa...
job" (Brewer and Wilson, 1995, p. 189). Members of the community feel betrayed when those they look to for protection are, themse...
tights, underpants and shoes were in a rolled-up heap about ten or fifteen feet away.2 She was naked from the waist down, with her...
unnecessary force are minority members. According to this report, police have employed lethal force to subdue unarmed suspects fle...
a crime. Even a convicted criminal cannot be the subject of punishment meted out by officers whose emotions get out of control. I...
people closer to the processes of arresting suspects and investigating crime scenes than ever before (Getty, 2001). Law enforceme...
national media fascination with the Crips and the Bloods ensured that gang formation would increase and soon be represented throug...
(Deontological, Teleological and Virtue Ethics, n.d.). Kants bottom-line position is that individuals should act from the "catego...
have enacted certain laws on their own which sometimes provide for testing in a much wider arena. Consider Idaho as an example. ...
private industry employees, law enforcement officials began wondering why they should not be receiving similar rewards. In privat...
of the popular culture. There are in fact many reasons to explain the police officers personality. The relevance of the article is...
In forty four pages this paper examines the law enforcement sector in a consideration of performance rewards and programs based up...
or heart attack. The use of the stun gun might add to the problem. However, studies on these guns suggest that they are not quite ...
as being subordinate to their white counterparts. This perceived image in the testing arena, where individuals are forced to perf...
contend, is fueled by nothing but a lot of "hot air and rhetoric" (Berry, 1995, p. PG). The cycle is not difficult to comprehend:...
entrenched police culture, call for fresh approaches to managing for ethics in police work. Gaines and Kappeler (2002) argue that...
Justice notes that in 1999 seven of ten law enforcement officers were employed by offices utilizing in-field computers or terminal...
crimes * Intervene in the operation of the police force when the delivery of police services and the enforcement of the law is who...
diversity in the police department in a town with a combined minority rate close to 50 percent continues to plague city officials,...
the profession in order to "beat people, violate individual constitutional rights or use excessive force" (Swope 80). No one beco...
the subsequent verdict has divided New Yorkers. Since the young, Haitian immigrant was riddled with bullets by police, there have ...
example, a parent might threaten to spank a child and the fear of the spanking would have a deterrent effect. Thus, the child woul...
IV. Conclusion 1. Police officers have a triple burden: a. They are in a helping profession and so are prone to burn ou...
Police Commander replied that "Community policing is about partnerships and problem solving. We do that currently, but we want to ...
2002). Senior officers are expected to train their subordinates and all officers must have excellent communication and organizati...
is actually weak. It only pertains to the individual. The person is supposedly getting what he deserves, but is society really ben...