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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
3 pages in length. The lean toward privatizing various social systems speaks to the overextended means of current operating methods in such industries as utilities, railroads, schools and prisons. The extent to which America's judicial system might benefit from privatization is challenged by the amount of access the public may or may not have to organizational records. Is the economic advantage strong enough to outweigh the absence of transparency when courts are not mandated under law to account for their activity? Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCprivcrts.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
benefit from privatization is challenged by the amount of access the public may or may not have to organizational records. Is the economic advantage strong enough to outweigh the
absence of transparency when courts are not mandated under law to account for their activity? Inasmuch as "a courts treatment of public access in a privatized world may be
subject to frequent change" (RCFP, 2007), there are two viable solutions to ensure transparency after privatization: 1) differentiate between organizations that do and do not perform a government service, such
as a charity operation and a jail, whereby the charity is much more accountable as to where its funding is derived; and 2) let the type of records being requested
determine if they pertain to government operations (RCFP, 2007; Cassell, 2002). Once this issue has been resolved, there are likely to be more drawbacks than benefits to handing over
judicial operation to commerce. The major arguments for privatization are a combination of economic and administrative concerns. It has been stated repeatedly how the private sector can operate courts
more cheaply by providing at least the same quality of service as does the public sector and demonstrating more flexibility in terms of anticipating needs and devising ways to meet
diem. It is also important to note that government agencies of small, often isolated municipalities may get into the judicial business as a means by which to improve their
economic basis and increase employment opportunities; facilities of this type located in and operated by small cities would not only supplement the municipal budgets but also contribute considerably to the
local economies. These operations would also benefit local merchants and suppliers, probably most significantly, provide employment for a significant number of local residents.
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