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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 4 page discussion of the problems currently confronting California. Emphasizing the problems of crime and drugs the author contends that some of these problems can be addressed by the California State government and some cannot. More often than not, in the most complex issues facing the state, a solution is likely to be found only in a joint address by state government and California's citizenry. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPcalPrb.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
a number of very serious problems facing it. These include issues surrounding immigration (issues such as whether or not schools should allow instruction in Spanish for native Spanish speakers),
issues surrounding employee wages and benefits, issues surrounding gambling and issues surrounding teacher accountability. One of the most critical issues confronting the state is crime and how to
deal with it. Some of these problems can be addressed by the California State government and some cannot. In some situations the state government can play an active
role in finding solutions to the complex problems confronting the state. In other cases, however, the solution lies with the people of California and not the government. More
often than not however, in the most complex issues facing the state, a solution is likely to be found only in a joint address by state government and Californias citizenry.
One of these more complex problems is crime. This problems should be, and in fact has been, at the front of
State Government Agenda. California government has, in fact, addressed this problem in some detail before. The Three Strikes Law, a law that requires that three time offenders are
automatically sentenced to life after their third crime, is one of these addresses. Although this law was hoped by many to be repealed by California voters on November 2,
2004 when they decided on Proposition 66 (Salladay, 2004), it was not. Author Joel Domanick clarifies that California is one of twenty-three states to have such a law but
it is unique because its provisions do not require a third "violent" crime: "to trigger
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