| #1786775 in Books | 2004-11-01 | 2004-11-01 | Original language:English | PDF # 1 | 1.50 x7.70 x10.00l,3.48 | File type: PDF | 744 pages||0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.| This book is BAD|By Customer|This was a required text book for my criminal justice class and it was bad. My professor kept talking about how great it was but when I read the book, it made me question my professor's intelligent.
The only good thing about it, is that it gave great details for most of the cast studies. It gave enough details that you can reasonably arg|About the Author|Jerome H. Skolnick is a Professor of Law at New York University. Malcolm M. Feeley is a Professor of Law (Jurisprudence and Social Policy) at the University of California, Berkeley. Candace McCoy is an Associate Professor of Criminal Justice a
Introduces the concept of crime and addresses key issues such as how we measure criminality, its variety, and the justifications we employ for punishing it. The book also discusses processing institutions: police, prosecutor, defense attorney, courts, sentencing and corrections. The book defines the relationships among these institutions and illustrates the relationships with examples. Materials in the book include cases and statutes, the writings and commentary of legal...
You easily download any file type for your device.Criminal Justice: Introductory Cases and Materials, 6th (University Casebook Series) | Jerome Skolnick, Malcolm Feeley, Candace McCoy. Just read it with an open mind because none of us really know.