Essay – Broken Windows Policing

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Essay – Broken Windows Policing

Essay Question: What is “broken windows policing”? Is the emphasis on crime-fighting or is it on order maintenance? Why? Even if this approach is effective, do you think it is fair to concentrate police attention — including arrests for minor infractions — on the different types of people that would be considered “disreputable” and disorderly?

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Essays must be at least 1,250 words long (that’s the equivalent of about 5 pages of double-spaced text in a word processing document). Write a minimum 1,250-word response. Full credit will be given for responses that apply scientific and evidence-based proposals for solving problems. (HINT: Use information from our readings, my lecture notes, and even external scholarly sources to craft your proposal. Proposals based on idealism, relative morality, or religious ideology will not receive full credit.).

One last note regarding source material — and this applies to essays and videos. Encyclopedias (like Wikipedia), and sites like About.com are good starting points, but they should not be used as primary sources. (In fact, by definition, they are not primary sources.) For example, if you find information about poverty in an article on About.com, look up their original source and confirm the information for yourself. The Auraria Library (click here) (Links to an external site.) makes it so easy to find information via their Web site, there really is no excuse for being sloppy about finding original sources. Research articles in academic journals, research books, and book chapters in edited volumes (including our course reader) are good examples of original sources. I will also accept newspaper and magazine articles (print or electronic) as sources if you confirm that their authors have gathered their own research.

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