...Discussion Question 1: Identify and discuss different types of sanctions used in correctional operations. Support your Answer. There are many different types of intermediate sanctions used in the United States; they are called intermediate sanctions because they are less severe than prison and more confining than probation. There is intensive supervision probation which includes a more rigorous and encompassing supervision by probation officers of their caseloads, which includes more frequent drug testing and the probationers are considered high risk when considering a possibility of reoffending. Another type of sanction is work release program that regulates an offenders movements, but allows them to maintain employment. One more type of...
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...Course Syllabus College of Criminal Justice and Security CJA/354 Version 4 Criminal Law Copyright © 2012, 2011, 2010, 2009 by University of Phoenix. All rights reserved. Course Description This is an introductory course in the study of criminal law, general legal principles, and how the criminal law functions in and affects modern society. This course highlights a variety of key topics, including the concept of crime and the development of criminal law, defenses to criminal charges, and a number of specific types of crimes, including personal crimes, property crimes, public order crimes, and offenses against public morality. Legal issues affecting punishment will also be discussed, as will ways the criminal law impacts victims of crime. Policies Faculty and students will be held responsible for understanding and adhering to all policies contained within the following two documents: • University policies: You must be logged into the student website to view this document. • Instructor policies: This document is posted in the Course Materials forum. University policies are subject to change. Be sure to read the policies at the beginning of each class. Policies may be slightly different depending on the modality in which you attend class. If you have recently changed modalities, read the policies governing your current class modality. Course Materials Champion, D. J. (2009). Leading U.S. Supreme Court cases in criminal justice: Briefs and key terms. Upper...
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...Alternatives to Incarceration Abstract Our country continues to search alternatives to the overcrowded prisons bulging at the seams. Citizens are crying for a relief on taxation in funding these prisons. The criminal justice system has searched for years for ideas to limit incarceration. Some alternative programs have withstood the test of time, some continue to build a name for themselves, and others have just come onto the scene. This paper will focus on three alternative programs to placing adults in prisons. These programs include military services, intensive supervision programs (ISP’s), and Restorative Justice programs. Each provides some type of benefit to criminals, corrections department, and society. Alternatives to Incarceration Our country seems to have gone in various directions trying to find a successful justice system to work in punishing crimes. We went from a rehabilitation system, to no tolerance policies in the 1980’s. Overcrowded prisons forced officials to let prisoners out early in the 90’s. Taxpayers wanted something done with crime in their communities, but didn’t know which way to turn. A faulty criminal justice system has been blamed in such that it had, “Inadequate or ineffective rehabilitation programs, lack of drug treatment, insufficient funding for resettlement after prison, and other . . . policies. . . .”, (Sherman & Strang, 2007, p. 12). Crimes continue to be a major concern within American society, yet our only response...
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...The Weak of the BRIC: Currency Depreciation in Russia and Brazil ◎D0131160 Irina Chen ◎D0131187 Gloria Chang ◎D0173297 Sunny Chiu ◎D0173270 Doris Chen ◎D0173670 Athena Du Contents Abstract ..................................................................................... 2 Brazil ......................................................................................... 3 Why Brazil become the BRIC ................................................... 3 What was behind Brazil’s Depreciation? ................................. 8 Russia ...................................................................................... 13 Why Russia become the BRIC?.............................................. 13 What was behind the Ruble depreciation? ........................... 19 Comparison and Similarities between Russia and Brazil ....... 24 In the Future ........................................................................... 25 The Future of Brazil ............................................................... 25 The future of Russia .............................................................. 25 Conclusion ............................................................................... 26 Contributor ............................................................................. 27 Reference ................................................................................ 27 1 Abstract The BRIC is the acronym of four nations, including Brazil, Russia, India and China...
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...was the investment. Investment was important to circle in for beginning the processing plant. So she accompanied a thought to adjust to partners by offering her thoughts and awing & persuading them to invest in the business. Sadly numerous vacated. At that point she wanted to begin a little subsidiary in UAE i.e. Expert designing administration. This was a huge hit with a decent team, trustworthy & hardworking team. The benefit that delivered specialist administration was utilized to invest in Middle East. There were relatively few real issues. Albeit beginning business in Middle East is easy however to get great trustworthy partners, fitting documentation visa customs, papers to be affirmed by labor were lengthy methodology. Picking of company name is additionally an issue as it must be sanction by the Chamber of trade. Catchy names are imperative to business. In administration world what works are catchy name & quality products & services. As indicated by him; from an absolutely strategic standpoint her greatest challenge was movement. Producing focused on activity, as she would see it, is the most troublesome piece of any new online...
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...Intermediate Macroeconomics 2 Coursework Question 1 a) The production function is Y=AKαL1-α as it is a constant-returns-to-scale production function. Computing the Solow residual giver you ∆AA , which is the rate of technological progress. From the question: α=0.2 ; ∆LL=n=0.01; ∆KK=0.07 ; ∆YY=0.05 Taking natural logarithms of the production function gives: ln(Y)=ln(A)+αln(K)+1-αln(L) Taking the first difference of both sides yields: ln(Y)-ln(Y-1)=ln(A)-ln(A-1)+α(lnK-lnK-1)+1-α(ln(L)-ln(L-1)) From here we can use the approximation: lnX-lnX-1≅X-X-1X-1=∆XX Giving: ∆YY=∆AA+α∆KK+1-α∆LL This is the growth accounting equation and can be rearranged to give the Solow residual: ∆AA=∆YY-α∆KK-1-α∆YY ∆AA=0.05-0.20.07-0.80.01=2.8% b) The new production function is: Y=Kα(AL)1-α I will compute the Solow residual in the same way as before. Starting with taking natural logarithms: ln(Y)=αln(K)+(1-α)ln(A)+1-αln(L) Taking the first difference: ln(Y)-ln(Y-1)=α(ln(K)-ln(K-1))+(1-α)(ln(A)-ln(A-1))+1-α(ln(L)-ln(L-1)) Using the approximation: : lnX-lnX-1≅X-X-1X-1=∆XX to give the growth accounting equation: ∆YY=α∆KK+(1-α)∆AA+1-α∆LL And rearranging to give the Solow residual and plugging the numbers in: ∆AA=11-α∙∆YY-α1-α∙∆KK-∆LL=3.5% Note that the growth rate of technology when the labour-augmented production function is used, of 3.5% is greater than that of the Standard Cobb-Douglas, of 2.8%. Your boss...
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...OLDSTONE & GREEN CORPORATE PRESENTATION INTELLIGENCE INSIGHT FACT INVESTIGATION DISCRETION AFRICA FOCUSED 2 LocalKnowledge www.oldstoneandgreen.com ABOUT US 3 Oldstone & Green Limited (“O & G”) is a Nigeria based independent Geopolitical Risk Consultancy, Research and Advisory firm, servicing an international client base and providing ¨ ¨ ¨ ¨ Our Ethos ¨ Insight ¨ Fact ¨ Investigation ¨ Discretion ¨ Intelligence Why Us? Our strong industry expertise, research knowhow and keen local knowledge of business, politics and markets makes us the preferred firm for organisations seeking to understand, compete and grow in Sub-Saharan Africa, with particular focus on Nigeria. O & G maximizes its exclusive relationship with well-placed, high profile political, diplomatic, business and economic contacts to deliver intelligent, informed and reliable facts, faster and better using our robust sources in major corporate establishments and government ministries, agencies, commissions and parestatals in Nigeria. www.oldstoneandgreen.com Geopolitical Risk Analysis Due Diligence Influence and Relationship Mapping Market Entry and Intelligence We are subcontractors to major London and US based risk consultancies and our clients include, global financial institutions, law firms, oil, gas and extractive companies, manufacturers, power and energy providers, retail and professional service firms and high-net-worth individuals. AFRICA FOCUSED 4 LocalKnowledge ...
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...Canadian International Council Strengthening the Non-Proliferation Regime: The Role of Coercive Sanctions Author(s): T. V. Paul Source: International Journal, Vol. 51, No. 3, Nuclear Politics (Summer, 1996), pp. 440-465 Published by: Canadian International Council Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/40203123 Accessed: 30/11/2010 19:58 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use, available at http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp. JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless you have obtained prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you may use content in the JSTOR archive only for your personal, non-commercial use. Please contact the publisher regarding any further use of this work. Publisher contact information may be obtained at http://www.jstor.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=cic. Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission. JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org. Canadian International Councilis collaborating...
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...A HANDBOOK FOR VALUE CHAIN RESEARCH Prepared for the IDRC by Raphael Kaplinsky and Mike Morris* We are grateful to colleagues in both our individual institutions and in the Spreading the Gains from Globalisation Network (particularly those participating in the Bellagio Workshop in September 2000) for discussions around many of the issues covered in this Handbook and also to Stephanie Barrientos, Jayne Smith and Justin Barnes. An Important Health Warning or A Guide for Using this Handbook Lest anyone feel overwhelmed by the depth of detail in this Handbook, especially with respect to the sections on methodology, we would like to emphasise at the outset: this Handbook is not meant to be used or read as a comprehensive step by step process that has to be followed in order to undertake a value chain analysis. We know of no value chain analysis that has comprehensively covered all the aspects dealt with in the following pages, and certainly not in the methodologically sequential Handbook set out below. Indeed to try and do so in this form would be methodologically overwhelming, and would certainly bore any reader of such an analysis to tears. Our intention in producing a Handbook on researching value chains is to try and comprehensively cover as many aspects of value chain analysis as possible so as to allow researchers to dip in and utilise what is relevant and where it is appropriate. It is not an attempt to restrict researchers within a methodological strait-jacket...
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...SBP-Research Bulletin Volume 1, Number 1, 2005 © 2005 by the State Bank of Pakistan. All rights reserved. Reproduction is permitted with the consent of the Editor. OPINIONS Trade between India and Pakistan: Potential Items and the MFN Status Abid Qamar∗ During the last several years, opening up of trade between India and Pakistan has become the most sought after question at many policy forums and among concerned groups. The issue has gained particular importance after India granted the Most Favored Nation (MFN) status to Pakistan, to comply with the principles of World Trade Organization (WTO) regime in 1995, and Pakistan’s reluctance in reciprocating so far. It is believed that increased trade relationship can play a vital role in normalizing the political relationship between the two countries. This will, therefore, benefit millions of people living in both countries as the resources would be diverted from less desirable areas, such as defense spending, to poverty alleviation initiatives. Given the likely impact of trade liberalization between the two countries, the unavailability of any established estimate of potential trade and the items likely to be traded is unfortunate. With a view to come up with some estimates based on some methodology, however simple it is, this note attempts to find the potential of trade between the two countries by identifying the potential items. It estimates the scope for exports and savings by substituting our imports from...
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...Objectives Back to Top The Course Project is designed to provide you with an opportunity to research a topic of interest related to some aspect of correctional administration. This project is an effort to allow you to fully explore issues related to either correctional officials or prison inmates. This project incorporates all TCOs. Guidelines Back to Top The course project is worth 320 total points and will be graded on APA formatting; quality of research topic; quality of paper information; proper use of text citations; proper grammar, punctuation, usage, and sentence structure; and the deliverable components for Weeks 1, 2, 5, and 6. There are four components to the Course Project. • title page, topic discussion, and a list of three references • annotated outline • annotated bibliography • Final Paper Requirements • APA guidelines must be followed for all course component deliverables. • At least six authoritative, outside references are required for the annotated bibliography and the Final Paper. • All DeVry University policies are in effect, including the plagiarism policy. • The Final Paper isdue in Week 6of this course. • The Final Paper must be 8 to 10 pages of text in length, Times New Roman 12-point font, double-spaced, include a cover page, introduction or abstract, body of the report, summary or conclusion, and a works cited page. • Any questions about this paper may be discussed in the weekly Q & A Discussion topic or instructor e-mail. Course Project...
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...in the corrections system are on PROBATION - Percentage breakdowns for types of offences: 9% Public Disorder (35% federal) DUI, indecent exposure, drunken disorderly, prostitution, etc. 18% Drug Offence (51% federal) 19% Property Offense (less than 10% federal) 53% Violent Offenses (less than 10% federal) - Regions highest to lowest South West Midwest Fed? North East - Top 5 States Federal Texas California Florida New York Notes From Ch. 1 in Textbook- - Penology the study of the use of punishment for criminal acts - Penitentiary typically used to describe older or highly secure prisons; first term used to describe secure facilities to hold criminals - Corrections the range of community and institutional sanctions, treatment programs, and services for managing criminal offenders - Gaols English system of jails - Walnut Street Jail first penitentiary in the united states -Pennsylvania System the “separate and Silent” system...
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...Research report Job Services Australia: design and implementation lessons for the British context by Dan Finn Department for Work and Pensions Research Report No 752 Job Services Australia: design and implementation lessons for the British context Dan Finn A report of research carried out by the Centre for Economic and Social Inclusion on behalf of the Department for Work and Pensions © Crown copyright 2011. You may re-use this information (not including logos) free of charge in any format or medium, under the terms of the Open Government Licence. To view this licence, visit http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/ or write to the Information Policy Team, The National Archives, Kew, London TW9 4DU, or email: psi@nationalarchives.gsi.gov.uk. This document/publication is also available on our website at: http://research.dwp.gov.uk/asd/asd5/rrs-index.asp Any enquiries regarding this document/publication should be sent to us at: Department for Work and Pensions, Commercial Support and Knowledge Management Team, Upper Ground Floor, Steel City House, West Street, Sheffield S1 2GQ First published 2011. ISBN 978 1 84712 986 4 Views expressed in this report are not necessarily those of the Department for Work and Pensions or any other Government Department. Contents iii Contents Acknowledgements ..................................................................................................................................
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...SOUTH AFRICA 756 SOUTH AFRICA SOUTH AFRICA 1. GENERAL INFORMATION 1.1. General Overview The Republic of South Africa occupies the southernmost part of the African continent (see Figure 1), stretching latitudinally from 22° to 35° S and longitudinally from 17° to 33° E. Its surface area is 1 219 090 km². It has common boundaries with the republics of Namibia, Botswana and Zimbabwe, while the Republic of Mozambique and the Kingdom of Swaziland lie to the northeast (Figure 2). Completely enclosed by South African territory in the southeast is the mountain Kingdom of Lesotho. FIG. 1. African Continent To the west, south and east, South Africa borders on the Atlantic and southern Indian oceans. Isolated, 1 920 km southeast of Cape Town in the Atlantic, lie Prince Edward and Marion islands, which became part of South Africa in 1947. South Africa has a lengthy coastline of about 3 000 km. This coastline is swept by two major ocean currents – the warm south-flowing Mozambique-Agulhas current and the cold Benguela. The SOUTH AFRICA 757 former skirts the east and south coasts as far as Cape Agulhas while the Benguela current flows northwards along the west coast as far as southern Angola. The contrast in temperature between these two currents partly accounts for important differences in climate and vegetation between the east and west coasts of South Africa. It also causes big differences in marine life, the cold waters of the west coast being much richer in oxygen...
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...Internship Report ON [pic] YOUR INVESTMENT PARTNER. Internship Report ON Sick Industry Rehabilitation Of Bangladesh Shilpa Bank Submitted To Mr: Mamtazuddin Ahmed Professor Department of Accounting & Information Systems University of Dhaka Submitted By Md. Zakir Hossain BBA (AIS), 8th Batch Roll-161 Department of Accounting & Information Systems University of Dhaka. DEPARTMENT OF ACCOUNTING & INFORMATION SYSTEMS UNIVERSITY OF DHAKA May 10, 2007 LETTER OF TRANSMITTAL Date: 10/05/2007 Mr: Mamtazuddin Ahmed Professor Department of Accounting & Information Systems University of Dhaka Sub: Submission of internship report on “Sick Industry Rehabilitation Of Bangladesh Shilpa Bank” Dear Sir, Here is my internship report on “Sick industry Rehabilitation of Bangladesh Shilpa Bank.” While preparing this report, I tried my best to follow the instructions that you have given me. This report is prepared for the fulfillment the requirement of the BBA Program. The entire report is based on my practical experiences in bank. I have furnished all the things what I have learnt during the internship program at Bangladesh Shilpa Bank, Head Office, Dhaka. I shall be highly encouraged if you are kind enough to receive this report. Thanking you. Sincerely yours, -------------------------- Md. Zakir Hossain BBA (AIS), 8th Batch Roll-161 Department of...
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