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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 7 page paper discusses the social disorganization theory in relation to organized crime. Harsher sentencing should be accompanied by a renewed emphasis on school, church, and home. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PP680245.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
listed below. Citation styles constantly change, and these examples may not contain the most recent updates. Social Disorganization and Organized Crime Research Compiled for
, Inc. by 10/2010 Please Organized crime represents one of the most concerning problems
of our time. It has both direct and indirect impacts on the physical and philosophical infrastructural features of our society. Too often those societal features are degraded to
the point that the social institutions and the individuals that comprise them are adversely affected. The results include rampant increases in other types of crime and a degradation of
the traditional values that characterize a working society. Just as concerning are the legal limitations that are in place when attempts are made to combat organized crime. The
purpose of this paper is to demonstrate that the way to go about addressing organized crime is to restore those social institutions, re-instilling our traditional values in our children and
young adults and consequently ridding ourselves of social disorganization and. Under the social disorganization theory there are key criteria that are
linked with an individuals propensity to engage in criminal activity. These are feelings of inequality, poverty, the presence of racism, and an overall feeling of despair (Siegel and Welsh,
2008). These criteria are important at all levels of crime. Even organized crime can be contended to not only result, in part at least, from the same factors
but to actually take advantage of those factors and the social disorganization that it puts in motion. To demonstrate the contentions presented above
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