BRIEF TABLE OF CONTENTS
Part One: The Foundations of Criminal JusticeChapter One: Crime and
Justice in the United StatesChapter Two: Crime and Its
ConsequencesChapter Three: Explaining CrimeChapter Four: The Rule
of Law
Part Two: Law EnforcementChapter Five: History and Structure of
American Law EnforcementChapter Six: Policing: Roles, Styles, and
FunctionsChapter Seven: Policing America: Issues and Ethics
Part Three: The CourtsChapter Eight: The Administration of
JusticeChapter Nine: Sentencing, Appeals, and the Death Penalty
Part Four: CorrectionsChapter Ten: Institutional CorrectionsChapter
Eleven: Prison Life, Inmate Rights, Release, and RecidivismChapter
Twelve: Community Corrections
Part Five: Additional Issues in Criminal JusticeChapter Thirteen:
Juvenile JusticeChapter Fourteen: The Future of Criminal Justice in
the United States
ROBERT M. BOHM is professor of Criminal Justice and Legal Studies
at the University of Central Florida in Orlando. He has also been a
faculty member in the Departments of Criminal Justice at the
University of North Carolina at Charlotte (1989–1995) and at
Jacksonville State University in Alabama (1979–1989). From 1973 to
1974, he worked for the Jackson County Department of Corrections in
Kansas City, Missouri, first as a corrections officer and later as
an instructor/counselor in the Model Inmate Employment Program, a
Law Enforcement Assistance Administration sponsored–work-release
project. He received his PhD in Criminology from Florida State
University in 1980. He has published numerous journal articles and
book chapters in the areas of criminal justice and criminology.
Besides being the coauthor of Introduction to Criminal Justice, 4th
ed. update (McGraw-Hill, 2007), he is the editor of The Death
Penalty in America: Current Research, the author of A Primer on
Crime and Delinquency Theory, 2nd ed., and Deathquest II: An
Introduction to the Theory and Practice of Capital Punishment in
the United States, 2nd ed., and an editor (with James R. Acker and
Charles S. Lanier) of America’s Experiment with Capital Punishment:
Reflections on the Past, Present, and Future of the Ultimate
Sanction, 2nd ed., and Demystifying Crime and Criminal Justice
(with Jeffery T. Walker). He has been active in the American
Society of Criminology, the Southern Criminal Justice Association,
and especially the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, having
served as Trustee-at-Large (1987–90), Second Vice-President
(1990–91), First Vice-President (1991–92), and President (1992–93).
In 1989, he was selected as the Outstanding Educator of the Year by
the Southern Criminal Justice Association. In 1999, he was elected
a Fellow of the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences and, in 2001,
he was presented with the Founder’s Award of the Academy of
Criminal Justice Sciences.
KEITH N. HALEY is professor of Criminal Justice, teaching in both
graduate and undergraduate degree programs in the School of
Criminal Justice, and associate vice president for special projects
at Tiffin University. Mr. Haley has also been the dean of the
School of Criminal Justice, and the dean of the School of
Off-Campus Learning at Tiffin University. He has acted as the
primary contact for the TU MBA program in Bucharest, Romania, and
the head of the Tiffin University Romania Study team that worked to
establish a Master of Community Justice Administration degree
program at the University of Bucharest. He has also served as
coordinator of the criminal justice programs at Collin County
Community College in Texas; executive director of the Ohio Peace
Officer Training Commission; chairman of the criminal justice
program at the University of Cincinnati; police officer in Dayton,
Ohio; community school director in Springfield, Ohio; director of
the criminal justice program at Redlands Community College in
Oklahoma; and electronics repairman and NCO in the U.S. Marine
Corps. Haley holds a BS in Education from Wright State University
and an MS in Criminal Justice from Michigan State University. He is
the author, coauthor, and/or editor of 12 books, several book
chapters, and many articles in criminal justice publications. He
has served as a consultant to many public service, university,
business, and industrial organizations on management, online
learning, criminal justice research, and memory skills. Haley is
also the secretary of the police section of the Academy of Criminal
Justice Sciences. Haley received the 2001 Nikolai N. Khaladjan
International Award for Innovation in Higher Education. The
Khaladjan Award is given to the higher education program that is
the most innovative and has the widest potential for impact on
postsecondary education.
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