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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3 page paper discusses the growing complexity represented by our progressively more multicultural world. Police must work to police this world as fairly as possible and the Courts define that fairness. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PP687591.doc
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listed below. Citation styles constantly change, and these examples may not contain the most recent updates. Policing 1980s to Today Research Compiled for The
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Policing today shares many similarities with policing of any particular era. At the same time there are
many distinctions. Our world, after all, has grown both in population size and in complexity. Technology has facilitated us rapidly moving from one corner of the world to
the other with few obstacles. The result is that people that at one time lived in rather isolated communities consisting of other people of the same general culture have
now settled in racially, ethnically, and culturally diverse areas. This phenomenon has magnified the multicultural considerations that they typical police person is faced with on the street in
the twenty-first century. Since the 1980s the Supreme Court has been confronted with an ever-increasing number of issues regarding what constitutes
appropriate policing. These issues range from racial profiling to search and seizure specifics to confession validity (Kinports, 2007). Kinports (2007) contends the Court has shifted "opportunistically from case
to case between subjective and objective tests, and between whose point of view--the police officers or the defendants--it views as controlling" (Kinports, 2007 p. 71). Kinports (2007) asserts that
the Court has even wavered back and forth in regard to details involving such cornerstone decisions such as Miranda, the procedural safeguard requiring that a suspect be informed that he
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