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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
Sociology of Crime: This 8-page essay discusses a number of issues inherent in the sociology of crime, including types of law, judicial history, and a chronological look at the prevalent theories used to delineate both the causal factors and patterns of aberrant human behavior. Fundamental to our own system of justice, (and thereby the subsequent and relevant theories that came to reflect our contemporary beliefs about criminology), is the British monarchy and its Common Law dicta. Using this as the cornerstone of the U.S. Constitution, our Forefathers delineated the democratic rules and judicial parameters that have remained with us to this day. Bibliography lists 5 sources. SNNatlaw.doc
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_SNNatlaw.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the criminal mind. Indeed, I suppose that when viewing any form of perversity from a distance, we can afford to be titillated or fascinated. However, let
any of us come face-to-face with someone determined to make us his next "victim," and fascination will quickly give way to feelings tantamount to being in our own, worst nightmare.
But for now, lets erase these images that are all too typical of any modern-day metropolis. Instead, let us turn back to a time when
our American Forefathers grappled with legal definitions/ parameters that would pave the way for the plethora of ideologies germane to criminology. Hard to imagine, isnt it?
What must it have been like to start from scratch? Or did they? This essay discusses a number of issues inherent in the sociology of crime, including
divergent types of law, judicial history, and a chronological look at the prevalent theories used to delineate both the causal factors and patterns of aberrant human behavior. Looking
first at the history of our American judicial system, one easily discovers an irrefutable connection between the constructs of British Common Law ideologies and our own. Moreover, back
in that bygone era common law (or natural law) had its basis in a system of moral and ethical principles that was innate to human nature and perceptible through reason.
This precept is very similar to the legal yardstick that we still use today relating to the "Reasonable Man" standard. In other words, common or natural
law implied just that: A shared, intrinsic understanding amongst all men (within a particular society), that had its roots in the acceptance of specific, societal concepts and codes of conduct
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