2,454 research outputs found
Do you know how your children are? International perspectives on child abuse, mistreatment, and neglect
The purpose of this article is to offer a brief overview of the state of children internationally as it pertains to their levels of abuse, neglect, and needs. The enormity of this topic is obvious, but it is hoped that a basic understanding and appreciation of the definitions, nature and extent, and myriad issues involved can be derived
Interview with Commissioner of Police George Asiamah, Ghana National Police Service Interviewed by Gordon A. Crews and Angela D. Crews
In January of 2007, Drs. Gordon and Angela Crews traveled with their graduate assistant, Mr. Kofi Annor Boye-Doe, and Ghanaian Fulbright Scholar, Mr. Ken Aikins, to Ghana, West Africa, in order to conduct a research study. The original research plan was to conduct a three part examination of: 1) the blend of indigenous government (rooted in religious practices and strongly associated with spirituality and mysticism) and state government in the Ghanaian justice system; 2) the treatment of women and children within these systems; and 3) the alternative dispute resolution, restorative justice, and conflict resolution strategies within the two systems.
During this trip, the researchers met with Commissioner of Police Mr. George Asiamah (who has become the driving force for the current Community Policing initiative in Ghana), other officials from the Ghana Police Service (GPS), faculty of the University of Ghana Legon and the University of Cape Coast. In the course of these meetings, the Crewsâ became better informed about the practice of justice in the country and some immediate law enforcement needs related to the development of the nation, specifically the dire need for training in âcommunityâ and âintelligence-ledâ policing.
Citizens in Ghanaian society (as well as citizens in most sub-Saharan African countries) do not trust the police, preferring to rely instead on âmagico-religiousâ forces and traditional authority figures to settle disputes (Abotchie, 2002). When circumstances do reach severity levels such that citizens are forced to contact law enforcement, the police role is circumscribed as reactive. Unfortunately, this tends to reinforce the perception of citizens that police only exist to take away the âbad guys.â Ghanaâs police force has a tradition of being used as a militaristic tool of oppression and this history, unfortunately, remains entrenched in the collective social conscience
Professional integrity in higher education: Behind the green curtain in the land of Oz
This article discusses concerns related to professional integrity in academics and to the use of collegiality as an informal criterion for employment and evaluation decisions. We question the nature of the educational enterprise and the academic environment within which both students and faculty operate. We use the AAUP Statement on Professional Ethics to guide our examination of collegiality, and the three traditional areas of faculty evaluation (teaching, scholarship, and service), as they relate to professional integrity. We discuss potential pitfalls in situations involving integrity concerns, and suggest that the use of collegiality in professional decisions is more prevalent and potentially harmful than many realize
Teaching Tips: Personal Criminal History Analysis Paper
Students often have difficulty visualizing the practical application of criminological theory. The following activity assists instructors to develop studentsâ abilities in evaluating behaviors and determining the theoretical perspectives that potentially could be used to explain those behaviors. It also is designed to assist students in comprehending how their own experiences impact their views on law-violating behavior and its etiology. This exercise facilitates studentsâ awareness of how their beliefs about the âcausesâ of law-violating behavior inevitably impact their beliefs about potential âsolutionsâ or âresponsesâ to this type of behavior. Eventually, students unfailingly begin to realize the artificial dichotomy between âus,â as the âlaw-abiders,â and âthem,â as the law-violators, what students perceive to be the âtypicalâ criminal
Recommended from our members
Interim Report: Art Image Copyright and Licensing Study
This report constitutes an interim report submitted to The Samuel H. Kress Foundation with respect to a grant for the study of museum licensing policies and terms for the use of art images. According to the original grant proposal, the requested grant period was eighteen (18) months, beginning as of May 1, 2009. The first twelve (12) months have centered on research and producing deliverables. That period is now completed. This report will document the tasks pursued and completed during the initial research term of the grant
Recommended from our members
Copyright Law and Unpublished Materials: Fair Use and Strategies for Archival Management
Recommended from our members
Information Resources and Library Services for Distance Learners: A Framework for Quality
This document contains recommendations on guidelines for information resources and library services for distance learners. As such, it may serve as a blueprint for policy development or updating existing guidelines at the local, state, regional and national level. The overarching intent of this work is to provide sample principles as a resource for developing, enhancing and endorsing standards and guidelines for distance learners
Recommended from our members
Roundtable: Sound and Video Archives
"Now, why single out different kinds of formats or different kinds of media and
separate them out from the text-based materials that weâve typically talked about?
And there are a variety of answers. These diverse media present diverse
challenges, and they also come in many different variations. I mean, just on the
example of audiovisual works, they could range from a simple home movie to a
feature release film, or on the example of sound recordings they could be
something as simple as an interview, as straightforward as an interview, or it could
be ethnological field studies, or it could be, well, Girl Talk and mashups and a
variety of other kinds of works.
Museum Policies and Art Images: Conflicting Objectives and Copyright Overreaching
Introduction Claims of copyright protection that overreach the bounds of justifiable legal rights occur in many different contexts. Indeed, in almost any copyright litigation, issues regularly surround the legitimacy of the copyright and the rightful claim to it. Although multitudes of copyright questions arise daily, few of them ever go before a judge. Most people struggle with their conflicts and decisions in the simpler context of day-to-day transactions. One context where such decisions r..
- âŠ