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This 3 page paper briefly discusses why knowing the historical developments in criminal justice and public service could be useful for the future. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
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3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: KV32_HVhistcj.rtf
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knowing its history will help in the future. This paper briefly states why knowing the historical developments in criminal justice and public service will be useful in the future of
these fields. Discussion Its possible to identify changes in the criminal justice system without research: for instance, in colonial America women were burned at the stake for witchcraft, a punishment
that has long since disappeared. We have also seen the rise of a spirit of vigilantism and the accompanying "three strikes" laws in many states. These are developments in criminal
justice and give us an idea of what the future might be like. Using just these two, we might predict that brutal and inhumane punishments will continue to be outlawed,
and harsh sentencing will continue to be used. One of the most basic facets of criminal justice is the law itself, which has changed dramatically over the years. Criminal law
as practiced in the United States has its roots thousands of years ago in the Code of Hammurabi, which dates from 2000 B.C. as well as the "Mosaic Code of
the Israelites," dating from 1200 B.C. (Siegel, 2009, p. 139). However, the real ancestor of U.S. law is the common law of England: After the American Revolution, "state legislatures standardized
common-law crimes such as murder, burglary, arson and rape by putting them in statutory form in criminal codes" (Siegel, 2009, p. 139). When it happened that common law proved incapable
of dealing with changing moral and social issues, "the states and Congress supplemented it with legislative statutes" (Siegel, 2009, p. 139). Thus, the main structure of our legal system has
come from the British model, but some of the laws have long since disappeared. One of the funniest things anyone can do is to go through some of the statutes
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