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This 3 page paper discounts Bauslaughs argument using the ARG approach. Bibliography lists 1 source.
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3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PP694808.doc
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listed below. Citation styles constantly change, and these examples may not contain the most recent updates. An Analysis of Gary Bauslaughs Argument Against
Zero Tolerance Research Compiled by 12/2011 Please
The concept of zero tolerance is becoming more and more popular in
our contemporary world. Many argue that zero tolerance could be a very positive factor in criminal justice. Establishing clear and unchanging criteria for the way police respond to
a particular crime and the way that a criminal is punished for that crime has obvious value, in fact. Considerable controversy, however, typically surrounds zero tolerance policies. Just
as there are supporters of the concept, there are also critics. Bauslaugh (2005), for example, argues that zero tolerance "unmitigated determination, as suggested by the idea of zero tolerance,
can be real threat to justice". Bauslaugh (2005) contends zero tolerance policies can be abused and used as a scapegoat for
the indiscriminate application of laws and policies that have been poorly thought out. He does not consider zero tolerance as a legitimate means of achieving justice because justice requires
balancing a multitude of interests (Bauslaugh, 2005). Bauslaugh (2005) posits his argument on two assumptions: 1. Zero tolerance policies are based on emotion and demand that society
abandon logic and reason, and 2. Zero tolerance is more about making politicians look like they are performing valuable duties, not about actually protecting those that our government is
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