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21. UUA: Criminal Justice And Prison Reform: 2005 Statement Of Conscience
In June 2003, the General Assembly of the UUA selected “criminal Justice and Universal access to rehabilitation, education, and job training programs
http://www.uua.org/actions/criminal-justice/05reform.html

Social Justice Statements
Home About Us Publications ...
Office for Bisexual, Gay, Lesbian and Transgender Concerns
Criminal Justice and Prison Reform
2005 Statement of Conscience
Background: www.uua.org/csw The PDF version of this document includes line numbers for reference. The Current Crisis Although Americans take great pride in the freedoms we espouse, the American prison system violates basic human rights in many ways. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which the United States endorsed in 1948, states in Article 5, “No one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.” American correctional practice often subjects inmates to abusive treatment, such as torture and rape, and neglects basic human needs such as health care and nutrition. Some suspects are detained without charge, legal counsel, or access to family. While indigent defendants have exactly the same rights to competent counsel as non-indigent defendants, in many states indigent defendants are not provided equality of representation. The American penchant for retribution squanders opportunities for redemption, rehabilitation, and restoration of the individual offender. Failures in the criminal justice system have created a disenfranchised, stigmatized class who are predominantly from lower-income backgrounds, poorly educated, or from racial and ethnic minorities. The punishment for crime is often simply separation from society, and the sentence one serves

22. Accounting,Accounting Other,Accounting Technician,Acting And
criminal Justice andor Law Enforcement Admin Reading Teacher education Real Estate rehabilitation and-or Therapeutic Services Other
http://www.universities.com/Search/Degrees/Post-Masters_certificate/
colleges and universities go to
Univ Home

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Mon Oct 27 13:14:08 EST 2003

23. • Criminal Justice •
In OYA facilities juvenile clients receive the treatment and education needed to In addition to the criminal Justice and required general education
http://www.tbcc.cc.or.us/0405ptp_cj.html

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2510 First Street
Tillamook, OR 97141
Phone: (503) 842-8222
Toll Free: (888) 306-8222
Fax: (503) 842-2214 Criminal Justice Juvenille Corrections (1-Year Certificate) 47 credit hours of required courses. TBCC will offer the coursework for this certificate, but completing this program in a one-year period will necessitate taking a significant number of courses from PCC. The courses in this certificate program have been designated in conjunction with both the needs and the authority of the OYA. Curriculum Requirements Criminal Justice Core CJA 101 Cultural Diversity in Criminal Justice Professions CJA 113 Intro to Criminal Justice Systems - Corrections CJA 222 Intro to Juvenile Process CJA 263 Intro to Corrections Casework CJA 280A CE: Criminal Justice Permission is required prior to registration for CJA 280A. Criminal Justice Core 15 credits Related Requirements AD 101 Alcohol Use and Addiction AD 150 Basic Counseling and Addiction AD 151 Basic Counseling Skills Mastery CAS 133 Basic Computer Skills/MS Office Select two out of the following three courses: PSY 201 General Psychology PSY 202 General Psychology PSY 203 General Psychology PSY 222 Family and Intimate Relationships PSY 239 Intro to Abnormal Psychology SOC 206 General Sociology: Social Problems - Related Requirements

24. Tillamook Bay Community College: Criminal Justice
CJA 280, Cooperative education criminal Justice, 3 In OYA facilities juvenile clients receive the treatment and education needed to change their
http://www.tbcc.cc.or.us/~proftech/cja1.htm
TBCC Home Sitemap Back Search
Criminal Justice
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
College Transfer and Professional Technical
Program Descriptions
  • Associate of Science degree - 90 credit hours, minimum, are required. Students must meet college graduation requirements including General Education, math and English competencies Students who plan to transfer to a four-year institution should contact that institution for transfer information.
  • Associate of Applied Science degree - 90 creidt hours, including 72 credit hours of required courses and 18 credit hours of General Education courses. Consult a student advisor for assistance in planning General Education courses. Students must meet college graduation requirements including General Eduction, math and English competencies.
  • Juvenile Corrections Certificate - Successful completion of the 50 credit hours of required courses.
Career Description
Persons in the criminal justice field may work in a municipal, county, state or federal law enforcement organization or corrections system. Other positions requiring law enforcement training are available at all levels of government and in private industry. Duties range from crime prevention programs to investigative and uniform patrol duties. Technical skills such as data processing and criminalistics are used to support overall law enforcement operations.

25. The Fortune Society - Links
The Center on Juvenile and criminal Justice is a private nonprofit use of prisons for education, training, treatment, and general rehabilitation.
http://www.fortunesociety.org/links.htm

Public Advocacy
Services Make a Suggestion Search POLICY AND PUBLIC ADVOCACY 360 Degrees is the first interactive web site designed to explore the criminal justice system and its prison population. Through first-person stories and interactive data the site takes a critical look at who is in prison today and why. American Civil Liberties Union National Prison Project was founded in 1972 by the American Civil Liberties Union and seeks to create constitutional conditions of confinement and strengthen prisoners’ rights through class action litigation and public education. The Project also publishes a quarterly journal, coordinates a nationwide network of litigators, conducts training and public education conferences, and provides expert advice and technical assistance to local community groups and lawyers throughout the country. The American Liver Society is a national, nonprofit organization dedicated to helping those who are or could possibly be affected by a liver disease. American Probation and Parole Association is at the vanguard in exploring issues relevant to the field of community-based corrections. American Probation and Parole Association is an international association composed of individuals from the United States, its US territories and Canada; actively involved with probation, parole and community-based corrections, in both adult and juvenile sectors including all levels of government, local, state/provincial and federal agencies.

26. The National Center On Education, Disability And Juvenile Justice
A study by Blumstein (1982) found that a greater level of criminal activity among On the other hand, of those incarcerated in correctional facilities,
http://www.edjj.org/Publications/list/drakeford_garfinkel-2000.html
Publications
The National Center on Education , Disability and Juvenile Justice Differential Treatment of African American Youth Will Drakeford and Lili Frank Garfinkel This article examines racial factors within the juvenile justice and mental health systems that contribute to the overrepresentation of African American men and boys in correctional facilities. The authors also explore recent efforts by lawmakers and academic institutions to address these inequalities. Racial Bias and the Juvenile Justice System Over the last 4 decades, racial inequalities among African American and other young men in juvenile detention centers have been well documented. The factors associated with overrepresentation of youth in corrections are complex. Evidence suggests that school failure, poorly developed social skills, and inadequate school and community supports are also associated with this phenomenon. The overrepresentation of minorities is evident in the adjudication process, including arrests, detention, prosecution, and commitment to detention. Indeed, the overrepresentation of youth of color in juvenile confinement continues to soar in direct proportion to the fears of violence and crime that grip the minds of those dominant culture U.S. citizens who are least likely to be its victims (Isaacs-Shockley, 1994). While the debate over differential treatment within the juvenile justice system lingers, incarceration rates among African American youth continue to rise. Research has shown that racial disparities within the juvenile justice system contribute to the overrepresentation of African American youth confined in juvenile detention centers. These issues are also prevalent as a result of biases that exist in mental health agencies.

27. Crime And Correctons
training and eliminating the prisoner rehabilitation education program. The Michigan criminaljustice landscape has been further altered in recent
http://www.michiganinbrief.org/edition07/Chapter5/CrimeCorrect.htm
Crime and Corrections
GLOSSARY
Arrest A law-enforcement agency's seizure, holding, summons, or citation of a person for an unlawful act. Camp A minimum-security corrections facility for prisoners convicted of less-serious offenses or nearing release. Community policing Index crimes Juvenile crime In Michigan, offenses committed by youths aged 16 and under. Non-index crimes Crimes and infractions other than the eight serious (index) crimes. Offense Unlawful acts reported to a law-enforcement agency. Parole A period of time prior to full release from state jurisdiction in which offenders are at large but subject to regular monitoring by a parole officer. Probation An alternative to incarceration in which the convicted person is at large but monitored; sometimes offenders are sentenced to incarceration followed by probation.
BACKGROUND
[APRIL 1, 2002] The Michigan State Police and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) classify crimes as

28. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship Of Fayetteville - UUs Adopt Bold Policy On Cri
UUs Adopt Bold Policy on criminal Justice and Prison Reform Universal access to rehabilitation, education, and job training programs and restorative and
http://www.fayettevilleunitarian.org/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=119

29. Criminal Justice Overview
He also doesn t believe in rehabilitation. He believes in limiting the reach The average level of education among criminal justice workers is only 2.5
http://faculty.ncwc.edu/toconnor/111/111lect01.htm
WHAT IS CRIMINAL JUSTICE?
The mood and temper of the public with regard to the treatment of crime and criminals
is the most unfailing test of the civilization of any country
(Sir Winston Churchill) Welcome to the academic discipline of criminal justice, an interdisciplinary broad-based academic discipline, with over 1500 Associate (2-year) degree programs, 900 Bachelors (4-year) degree programs, 90 Masters (2-year) degree programs, and 18 Ph.D. (3-year) programs. SOME DEFINITIONS Criminal justice is the study of criminal (penal) law, social control, constitutional law, criminal procedure and evidence, criminology, victimology, components that make up the loose array of institutions and activities we call a system (policing, courts, corrections, and community services), politics, and the idealistic notion of "truth in action" we call administration of justice. Each area of study is equally important, and will be explained briefly. A penal law is one that has a provision for punishment. Hence, we are primarily concerned with laws that legislators pass which have penalties. Social control involves the range of pressures brought to bear on people to establish conformity. It can range from customs and folkways (dirty looks) to norms and mores (more aggressive responses to deviants).

30. Future Of Corrections
This is in addition to the issue of facilities holding terrorists, which presents its own problems Journal of criminal Justice education 15(2) 451478.
http://faculty.ncwc.edu/toconnor/294/294lect16.htm
THE FUTURE OF CORRECTIONS
"May you live in interesting times" (Arab saying) Corrections must be recognized as an integral component of an interdependent and coordinated system of justice understood in relation to the role of social control in society. This means that we must examine crime and its control from a multilayered perspective. For example, crime control must be considered in relation to the community roots of social problems (e.g., poverty, unemployment, drugs, inadequate housing), and penal reform must be considered in relation to societal reform (e.g., economic opportunity, education, race relations). To continue going on as if locking up a significant portion of the population is going to do us any good is foolish . The costs are astronomically high, and there are many negative by-products if we continue our present course of penal policy. The negatives include things like the overcrowding crisis, the financial and budgetary strains, increased prisoner litigation, the disproportionate confinement of minorities (especially juveniles), the revolving door of recidivism, AIDS and disease outbreaks, aging offenders with special needs, and correctional employee stress. There might be a couple of ways to face these challenges: one, to create a "task force" to examine corrections; and two, to study the problems. A TASK FORCE ON CORRECTIONS A long time ago in 1967, the President had a

31. CARF The Rehabilitation Accreditation Commission
CARF Commission on Accreditation of rehabilitation facilities criminal justice educational programs may include either communitybased or
http://www.carf.org/Providers.aspx?content=content/Accreditation/Opportunities/B

32. DeMossNewsPond.com | Prison Fellowship Newsroom | Criminal Neglect | Op-Ed In US
criminal Neglect Substance Abuse, Juvenile Justice and the Children Left Instead of providing care and rehabilitation, many facilities are nothing
http://www.demossnewspond.com/pf/releases/2005/usatoday010105.htm
Changing Lives. Changing Communities. NEWSROOM HOME PRESS KIT NEWS RELEASES BOOK AN INTERVIEW ... MEDIA COVERAGE A newsroom in DeMossNewsPond.com Web site:
www.prisonfellowship.org Related Newsrooms:
Operation Starting Line

Angel Tree

Wilberforce Forum
Criminal Neglect Published Jan. 1, 2005 in USA Today by Joseph A. Califano, Jr. and Charles W. Colson "... A top-to-bottom overhaul of the nation's juvenile justice systems is mandatory if these [troubled youngsters] ever are to avoid becoming adult crime statistics."
Drug and alcohol abuse is implicated in all types of juvenile crime, including almost 70% of violent offenses, 72% of property offenses, and more than 80% of other offenses, such as vandalism and disorderly conduct.
State juvenile justice systems were created more than 100 years ago to protect and reform young people who commit crimes-to provide care, custody, and discipline in a way that closely would approximate that which should be given by parents. This is the goal, but the reality is a grim, modern version of Charles Dickens' Oliver Twist. Instead of providing care and rehabilitation, many facilities are nothing more than colleges of criminality for these kids.

33. Definitions - Texas Department Of Criminal Justice
The Texas Department of criminal Justice operates State Prisons, State Jails, Parole, or to attend education or rehabilitation programs. Revocation.
http://www.tdcj.state.tx.us/definitions/definitions-home.htm
Search: TDCJ Home To access the non-javascript navigational menu click here or scroll to the bottom of this page.

Definitions
A
Absconder
. An offender on parole or community supervision who fails to report to his/her Parole Officer or Community Supervision Officer and cannot be located for the purpose of establishing or continuing supervision. A warrant can be issued for the apprehension and detention of an absconder.
B
Battering Intervention and Prevention Program (BIPP)
. These are operated by nonprofit organizations to provide treatment and educational services on a local basis to batterers referred by the courts for treatment. Such treatment and educational services are designed to help batterers stop abusive behavior. Working in collaboration with the Texas Council on Family Violence (TCFV), TDCJ-CJAD has established minimum Guidelines for programs to receive funding.
Board of Pardons and Paroles (BPP)
. See Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles
Board of Criminal Justice
. See Texas Board of Criminal Justice (TBCJ) Boot Camp A residential punishment program for offenders on community supervision. Modeled after military basic training, boot camps target young, first-time offenders. Boot camps emphasize physical exercise, strict supervision and discipline. They offer education, life skills training and restitution services. They may also offer substance abuse education.

34. Correctional Services - Criminal Justice In Review: 2001/2002
criminal Justice in Review 2001/2002 Ted Leggett, Antoinette Louw, Martin Schönteich and provide education, training and rehabilitation programmes;
http://www.iss.co.za/Mono/Chap5.html
CHAPTER 5
CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
Criminal Justice in Review: 2001/2002
The Department of Correctional Services is headed by a National Commissioner of Correctional Services. The National Commissioner is assisted by four Chief Deputy Commissioners responsible for operational support, functional services, corporate services and finance. The department is divided into provinces headed by Provincial Commissioners, 148 management areas and 192 community corrections offices.
The aim of the Department of Correctional Services is to contribute to maintaining and protecting a just, peaceful and safe society by enforcing court-imposed sentences. The department also aims to detain prisoners in safe custody while ensuring their human dignity, and to promote the social responsibility and human development of prisoners and people subject to community corrections.
The key functions of the department are to render services that contribute to community protection and the rehabilitation of offenders through:
  • safe custody of prisoners under conditions consistent with human dignity;

35. Correctional Services - Criminal Justice In Review 2001/2002 - Monograph No 88 N
criminal Justice in Review 2001 / 2002 Ted Leggett, Antoinette Louw provide education, training and rehabilitation programmes;
http://www.iss.co.za/pubs/Monographs/No88/Chap5.html
CHAPTER 5
CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
Published in Monograph No 88, November 2003
Criminal Justice in Review 2001 / 2002
Ted Leggett, Antoinette Louw
Martin Sch nteich and Makubetse Sekhonyane

The Department of Correctional Services is headed by a National Commissioner of Correctional Services. The National Commissioner is assisted by five Chief Deputy Commissioners responsible for operational support, functional services, corporate services and finance. The department is divided into provinces headed by Provincial Commissioners, 148 management areas and 192 community corrections offices.
The aim of the Department of Correctional Services is to contribute to maintaining and protecting a just, peaceful and safe society by enforcing court-imposed sentences. The department also aims to detain prisoners in safe custody while ensuring their human dignity, and to promote the social responsibility and human development of prisoners and people subject to community corrections.
The key functions of the department are to render services that contribute to community protection and the rehabilitation of offenders through:
  • safe custody of prisoners under conditions consistent with human dignity;

36. When It Comes To Fighting Crime, Liberals And Conservatives Alike Seem To Be Sha
new approach to rehabilitation fulltime Christian education and training The state s Department of criminal Justice unanimously approved the plan
http://www.policyreview.org/jul97/thfaith.html
O ne Nation Under God Jailhouse Rock of Ages W hen it comes to fighting crime, liberals and conservatives alike seem to be shadowboxingdodging the most fateful aspect of criminal justice, the religious dimension. Liberals want more money for rehabilitation programs, which often amount to nothing more than fuzzy self-esteem courses or cushy entertainment privileges. Conservatives correctly expose the failure of these initiatives and rightly demand hard time for serious offenders. But they are too eager to abandon criminals to a system that almost certainly will further harden their hearts. Charles Colson, who has probably been in more prisons than any man in America, is calling for a new approach to rehabilitation, one defined by its moral and religious mettle-one that seeks, in a word, redemption. Colsonthe Watergate felon turned evangelical Christianis the founder of Prison Fellowship, a Christian outreach effort active in 90 percent of America's prisons. After 20 years of creating piecemeal programs for inmates and ex-cons, Colson wants to launch the spiritual equivalent of Desert Storm. In April, the first wave of his church-based volunteers invaded a Texas prison to offer two dozen inmates round-the-clock Christian education and training. Although state guards continue to provide security, Prison Fellowship staffers run virtually all other day-to-day activities in one wing of the Jester II facility, a minimum-security prison outside Houston. Call it the God Pod. Prayers have replaced early-morning push-ups, while group Bible discussions have pre-empted evening MTV. The ultimate objective: To help as many men as possible become followers of Christ.

37. USD - Why Criminal Justice?
To provide a sound basic education in criminal justice for graduates who choose to rehabilitation (state and federal), and shelter/advocacy programs.
http://www.usd.edu/cjus/whycjus.cfm
search
site people USD A to Z

38. DOJ - Youth Justice - Youth Justice Renewal
Please note, while the Youth criminal Justice Act (YCJA) is a federal law, it is applied of youth correctional facilities and rehabilitation programs.
http://canada.justice.gc.ca/en/ps/yj/information/directory.html

Latest Updates
Annual Statement on the YCJA About Youth Justice Youth Criminal Justice Act ... Information for the Public > A Canadian Directory of Youth Justice Resources
A Canadian Directory of Youth Justice Resources
In addition to the documents produced by the Department of Justice Canada, the following organizations have produced information on youth crime and youth justice. Materials are either available for download or for ordering through the following links. Please note, while the Youth Criminal Justice Act NATIONAL RESOURCES The Royal Canadian Mounted Police has developed training materials and presentations of particular interest to RCMP members that focus on parts of the YCJA and the role of police in working with other services providers and the community. Resources include:
  • Pocket Guide for Police Police Pocket Card Community consultation
The Access to Justice Network (ACJNet) is an electronic community that brings together educational resources and information on justice and legal issues. Their Online Resource Room includes classroom materials and lesson plans on youth justice. Justice for Children and Youth
  • Wallet cards on youth records (available in 15 languages) Know Your Rights Booklet explaining misconceptions of the youth justice system, and what can happen to youth once they enter it

39. American Bar Association - Criminal Justice Section - Criminal
He is also a contributing editor to criminal Justice magazine and former use education advocacy based on the IDEA, section 504 of the rehabilitation Act
http://www.abanet.org/crimjust/spring2003/juvenile_justice.html
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Criminal Justice Section
Welcome Criminal Justice Magazine
Spring 2003
Volume 18 Number 1
Juvenile Justice Robert E. Shepherd, Jr. Robert E. Shepherd, Jr ., is emeritus professor of law at the University of Richmond School of Law in Virginia. He is also a contributing editor to Criminal Justice magazine and former chair of the Section’s Juvenile Justice Committee. Special Education Issues:
Part II
A previous column discussed four recent handbooks addressing the legal issues presented by children who are behavioral risks in the school system and who then become involved in the juvenile justice system. ( See Special Education Issues Identifying special needs See The Special Needs of Youth in the Juvenile Justice System: Implications for Effective Practice (2001), Kimberly J. Adams, Kim Brooks, and Joshua Rose eds., at 19–32.) These are the primary educational disabilities that may bring the juvenile within the purview of the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). Getting services and influencing detention decisions Once it is determined that a juvenile client has a disability that requires services, the lawyer should seek to divert the case from the delinquency system and return it to the school for services. As pointed out in the previous column, schools increasingly seek to "criminalize" school behaviors, especially with children who are expensive to serve, and counsel should initially try to have the matter referred back to the educational system. The recent handbook by Eileen Ordover of the Center for Law and Education

40. Criminal Justice Abstracts - Current Serials Source List
Journal of criminal Justice education 10511253 Journal of criminal Law and Criminology, Journal of Performance of Constructed facilities 0887-3828
http://www.csa.com/factsheets/supplements/cja.php
CSA Responds to Hurricane Katrina Quick Links Criminal Justice Abstracts Factsheet Criminal Justice Abstracts - Current Serials Source List The number following the serial title is the ISSN (International Standard Serial Number) which is an eight-character number that uniquely identifies a periodical or journal. When you have selected the Criminal Justice Abstracts database and want to search for an ISSN, use the IS= field code followed by the standard ISSN format with the hyphen between the first 4 and the second 4 characters, eg: is=(0002-953X).
ABNF Journal
Accident Analysis and Prevention
ACTA Sociologica
Addiction
Addictive Behaviors
Administration and Policy in Mental Health
Adolescence
Adolescent Psychiatry
Advances in Nursing Science
Affilia: Journal of Women and Social Work African Affairs African Security Review Aggression and Violent Behavior: A Review Journal Aggressive Behavior Alcohol Studies Bulletin Alcoholism Treatment Quarterly American Behavioral Scientist American Criminal Law Review American Educational Research Journal American Ethnologist American Jails American Journal of Criminal Justice American Journal of Criminal Law American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse American Journal of Economics and Sociology American Journal of Epidemiology American Journal of Family Therapy American Journal of Forensic Psychology American Journal of Health Studies American Journal of Legal History American Journal of Orthopsychiatry American Journal of Preventive Medicine

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