10 research outputs found

    Theory and Application of Roscoe Pound\u27s Sociological Jurisprudence: Crime Prevention or Control?

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    The current interest in reforming the administration of justice has been triggered by a number of factors including the 1967 report of the President\u27s Commission on Law Enforcement and the Administration of Justice and the treatment afforded arrestees during the civil disorders of the past few years. The nation is alarmed at the reported annual increases in crime, and this alarm was manifested in the 1968 presidential election when law and order became a major issue. Superficially the answer may seem clear: more effective enforcement of the law and, when necessary, more stringent laws. The critical issue, however, is a jurisprudential-philosophical one: ought the proper approach to crime essentially be its prevention through methods such as the rehabilitation of criminal offenders, or its control through efficient administrative procedures? This is not a new question in jurisprudence, but it remains an important and unresolved one. This article will examine an analytical approach to this problem which was developed and applied by Roscoe Pound, one of America\u27s most eminent jurists. After describing and interpreting Pound\u27s concept of sociological jurisprudence, we will relate it generally to the reform of criminal justice administration and analyze Pound\u27s attempt to apply his theory as -Director of the Cleveland Crime Survey of 1921. Finally, we will compare the recommendations of that Cleveland study and the recent report of the President\u27s Commission in a modest effort to assess their impact on the administration of criminal justice and to draw some lessons for future reform endeavors

    Theory and Application of Roscoe Pound\u27s Sociological Jurisprudence: Crime Prevention or Control?

    Get PDF
    The current interest in reforming the administration of justice has been triggered by a number of factors including the 1967 report of the President\u27s Commission on Law Enforcement and the Administration of Justice and the treatment afforded arrestees during the civil disorders of the past few years. The nation is alarmed at the reported annual increases in crime, and this alarm was manifested in the 1968 presidential election when law and order became a major issue. Superficially the answer may seem clear: more effective enforcement of the law and, when necessary, more stringent laws. The critical issue, however, is a jurisprudential-philosophical one: ought the proper approach to crime essentially be its prevention through methods such as the rehabilitation of criminal offenders, or its control through efficient administrative procedures? This is not a new question in jurisprudence, but it remains an important and unresolved one. This article will examine an analytical approach to this problem which was developed and applied by Roscoe Pound, one of America\u27s most eminent jurists. After describing and interpreting Pound\u27s concept of sociological jurisprudence, we will relate it generally to the reform of criminal justice administration and analyze Pound\u27s attempt to apply his theory as -Director of the Cleveland Crime Survey of 1921. Finally, we will compare the recommendations of that Cleveland study and the recent report of the President\u27s Commission in a modest effort to assess their impact on the administration of criminal justice and to draw some lessons for future reform endeavors

    Black Power in a Prison Library

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    1983 National Debate Tournament Final Debate: Should the United States Military Intervention into the Internal Affairs of Any Foreign Nation or Nations in the Western Hemisphere Be Prohibited?

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