Contemporary Legal Policy Issues
CCJS  331
12 November 2007 - 27 January 2008


DATES    FOCUS    OBJECTIVES       TEXT      ASSESSMENT      GRADES    PARTICIPATION     CONTACT ME


Purpose:
This course surveys a wide variety of social, political and moral problems related to criminal justice practices and policies. It is designed to link broad social science principles to the operation of the police and criminal justice system. It addresses the question of how the police and courts fit into the larger picture of Society. Life in as large and complex / diverse a society as America's poses many dilemmas for criminal justice officials, and the course tackles those complexities.


Focus:

There will be discussions and lectures that address such topics as

This may seem to be a mixed bag of subjects. To a degree this is true, but permitted by the course insofar as these topics are all "contemporary" issues. However, there is a link or an over-arching theme that holds the topics and the course together, which is The Bill of Rights. Whether it is the 8th Amendment (cruel & unusual punishment in terms of mandatory minimums, prison overcrowding or capital punishment) or the 6th (fair trials & juries), or 4th (high-tech gadgetry to conduct searches), the 1st (pornography), 2nd (Gun Control) or the "right to privacy" found in the 9th, the law that concerns all these topics must meet the standards established by two hundred years of interpretation of the Bill of Rights. And in focusing on the role of the Constitution in our lives, we will examine the role of the citizen in modern America in defining our rights and responsibilities in society.


Objectives:

By the end of the course, students are intended to have a clearer idea of the proper limitations on the use of the criminal justice system to deal with social issues, and of the problems involved in the regulation of individual behavior in an open and democratic society.

More specifically, students should be able to



Text:  Criminal Justice in America, 3rd / Hancock & Sharp
 


Assessment:

20% of the total mark will be determined by your participation in class discussion and participation. I will be assigning exercises that require your participation.

20% (10% each for two essay questions) mid-term exam.  These will be essays that intend to assess how well you have digested and understood course content.  Open book.  Open Notes.

20% on a term paper that reports your findings on a particular, approved topic concerning the current status of law relevant to your topic, and the social and political forces that have brought about and that are acting upon the topic. The point of the term paper is to (a) permit you the opportunity to earn credit from any pet topic that you may interested in pursuing, and (b) to provide you with the opportunity to marshal arguments and organize material into a clear, concise, documented, formal report on a topic of your choice.

40% of your mark will be determined by a proctored final exam.

A NOTE:Academic dishonesty and plagiarism are not acceptable and will mean a grade of F (Failure). Academic dishonesty means (but is not limited to) getting someone else to prepare work for you, or helping another person with their assigned and examinable work. Plagiarism means passing off someone else's work as your own. You can avoid this by giving credit where credit is due -- record the sources of your work, learn how to quote properly, and cite the books, articles or web pages you have used for your information. It may sound like simple manners, but failure to live by the rules has serious academic consequences.  If you wish to avoid it, try this tutorial designed by the University.  It will take you about 30 minutes, but it will also help to keep you out of trouble:

http://www.umuc.edu/prog/ugp/ewp_writingcenter/modules/plagiarism/start.html

Also, from the UMUC Catalog:

Students should understand that the quality of their writing will affect their grade point average.... Acceptable college-level writing expresses thoughts in a logical, well-organized form, using proper grammar and complete sentences, and correct punctuation and spelling.


GRADES

A - 90 - 100 Outstanding Scholarship
B - 80 - 89 Excellent Work
C - 65 - 79 Good Achievement
D - 50 - 64 Marginal or unsatisfactory Performance
F(a) Academic Failure
F(n) Failure for Non-Attendance
W - Withdrawal


 PARTICIPATION

Remember that there is a 20% component of the final course grade based on participation. Some minimum of student participation is necessary to make this distance education class into a course that is more like a real college course than just a correspondence course. At a minimum, you should pick up and respond to messages every other day (minimum three times per week). Your contributions needn't be lengthy essays: try to emulate how you would contribute to a conversation going on in a live classroom.
If you are going TDY or into the field and will be absent for a "substantial" length of time, you may be required to withdraw:  in a 14-week class, absence for more than two weeks may require withdrawal. I will consider absences cumulatively - a series of week-long absences is as detrimental as one continuous absence.

Also, be forewarned: keeping up with participation is more work than you might think, and especially as the semester wears on and your other in- and out-of-course responsibilities add up, the work involved in participating may seem overwhelming. However, keep the 20% of your grade in mind. (Simply listening to the conversations does not count as participation. You must write to get credit.) If you pass all the problems but never contribute to discussion, you should expect nothing better than a C- for the participation component of your final grade. If you don't make discussion and fail problems (and I do give failing grades), you can expect less.

For a more detailed explanation of what I expect in the way of participation, CLICK HERE


DATES:
 
EVENT
DATE
Course starts on
Monday, November 12
Mid-Term On-Line  Test
December 12/13th
Break for Christmas
Week of Dec 23-Dec 30th
We Begin Again on
Monday December 31st
Term Paper Due Saturday, January 12 
Proctored Final Exam Week
21-27 January

 
Week Dates Topic Reading
1 Nov 12-18 The organizational structure of the criminal justice system Chapters 1, 3-5
2 Nov 19-25 Law Enforcement - a historical perspective 
Paper requirements discussed
Ch. 6
3 Nov 26-Dec 2 Law Enforcement & Immigration Ch. 7-10
4 Dec 3-9 The Courts  Ch. 11,12, 13
5 Dec 10-16 Victims & Restorative Justice  Ch. 2, 26
6 Dec 17-23 Convictions Ch. 14,15
. . . .
7 Dec 31 - Jan 6 Corrections Ch. 16 - 20
8 January 7-13 Juvenile Justice Ch. 21 - 24
9 January 14-20 Drugs And Crime Myths Ch 25, 28
10 January 21-27 PROCTORED EXAM WEEK Week .


If you have questions, please contact me at:
jglover@faculty.ed.umuc.edu
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