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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
3 pages in length. The ethics that pertain to forensic science may be somewhat of a departure from any other industry where ethical consideration is paramount to overall operation, but those distinctions are quite few inasmuch as ethics provides a common denominator upon which all sectors are to follow. The greatest concerns in forensics, however, revolves around "twisting justice, prostituting the profession, and operating without adequate ethics guidelines" (Norko, 2005, pp. 286-289) whereby the actions of the minority serve to disrupt the integrity of the entire industry. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCForenEth.rtf
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a common denominator upon which all sectors are to follow. The greatest concerns in forensics, however, revolves around "twisting justice, prostituting the profession, and operating without adequate ethics guidelines"
(Norko, 2005, pp. 286-289) whereby the actions of the minority serve to disrupt the integrity of the entire industry. Forensic psychology is somewhat
different from other sectors of the field by virtue of its intrinsic connection to the criminal justice system, an alliance that provides for better understanding of "the vast psychological perspectives"
(Diviny et al, 2000) inherent to the law. More than that, however, is the fact that forensic psychology deals in myriad aspects of the legal component, not the least
of which include helping to set policy and create laws, determining offender competency, establishing a defendants mental condition at the time when the crime was committed, criminal profiling, attorney consultation
for jury selection, treating mentally unstable offenders, acting as expert witness in court and "analyzing a criminals mind and intent" (Diviny et al, 2000). To operate outside the stringent
composition of industry ethics when the aforementioned responsibilities reach far beyond the standard consideration of moral behavior is to relinquish ones right to uphold the position.
Attaining the appropriate credentials is a mandate for ethical behavior within todays counseling profession. Not only do credentials certify that forensic psychologists have "proven their mastery
of professional knowledge and skills" (Mariani, 1998, p. 31), but they also offer a considerable indication that ethical guidelines are strictly followed. To be sure, possessing a modicum of
expertise is directly associated with professional ethics in that someone passing himself off as a knowledgeable - and therefore qualified - forensic psychologist is breaching the very fundamentals of the
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