Comparative Criminal Justice - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Comparative Criminal Justice

Description:

Comparative Criminal Justice Six Model Nations England, France, Germany China, Japan, Saudi Arabia Legal Traditions (Distinct Approaches) England: Unitary Common Law ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:2597
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 14
Provided by: keithwilm6
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Comparative Criminal Justice


1
Comparative Criminal Justice
  • Six Model Nations
  • England, France, Germany
  • China, Japan,
  • Saudi Arabia

2
Legal Traditions(Distinct Approaches)
  • England Unitary Common Law
  • France Unitary Civil Law
  • Germany Federal Civil Law
  • China Socialist Law
  • Japan Civil Law hybrid system national
    tradition and merging foreign cultures.
  • Saudi Arabia Islamic Law
  • A unitary government means that governmental
    power is centralized rather than being divided
    between states and a central government as in a
    federal system such as the U.S. and Germany.

3
Crime Issues
  • England drugs, terrorism, immigration, money
    laundering. Minority rights.
  • France drugs, terrorism, immigration, hate
    crime. Racial tension cultural conflict.
  • Germany drugs, immigration, hate crime.
    Right-wing extremism and ethnic violence.
  • China organized crime (drugs, guns, smuggling,
    gambling), corruption, gangs, and economic crime.
  • Japan drugs and organized crime (Boryokudan).
  • Saudi Arabia drug crimes.

4
Question
  • Which of the following
  • domestic and/or transnational crimes
  • do you think
  • is having the greatest effect on
  • crime rates and crime policies?
  • Immigration, drug trafficking, or terrorism?

5
Crime Rate
  • England low-moderate 9,928 per 100,000 (2001)
    increase since late 90s.
  • France low-moderate 6,932 per 100,000 (2002)
    increase since late 90s.
  • Germany low-moderate 7,893 per 100,000 (2002)
    decrease since late 90s.
  • China low 163 per 100,000 (1998) increased
    through the 90s.
  • Japan low 2,210 per 100,000 (2001) increased
    through the 90s.
  • Saudi Arabia low 157 per 100,000 (2001)
    increased through the 90s (highest rate of
    increase).

6
Question
  • Do you think homogeneity has an effect on crime
    rates in individual countries?
  • If so, in what way?

7
Crime Policy
  • England criminal justice reform and get tough
    policies.
  • France get tough and zero tolerance
    policies.
  • Germany reunification policies.
  • China strike hard campaigns modification of
    criminal procedure laws increase in the death
    penalty for a variety of crimes.
  • Japan starting to adopt get tough crime
    policies.
  • Saudi Arabia harsh punishments including the
    death penalty for drug trafficking religious
    based culture (Koran) inhibits crime.

8
Government
  • England A monarchy, however, the Prime Minister
    leads the nation. Parliament is the supreme
    power Cabinet members administer the police,
    courts, and corrections. Elected and hereditary
    representation.
  • France A unitary republic, a president and
    elected representatives.
  • Germany A federal republic. General power is
    in the hands of the chancellor not the president.
    Elected representatives.
  • China A unitary socialist government
    subordinate to the Chinese Communist party.
    Primary organs include the presidency, the State
    Council and the National Peoples Congress.
  • Japan A unitary constitutional monarchy (the
    emperor is ceremonial) with a prime minister and
    three branches of government. Elected
    representation.
  • Saudi Arabia A nonconstitutional monarchy the
    king is the chief of state and head of
    government. The king selects the Council of
    Ministers. No system of election or
    representation.

9
Constitution and Laws
  • England no written constitution, rely on
    constitutional traditions, compacts, and Common
    Law no penal code.
  • France constitution of the Fifth Republic
    (1958) penal code.
  • Germany the constitution is called the Basic
    Law (1949) German law is a combination of
    statutes, ordinances, and administrative rules.
  • China no constitution, a movement from the
    rule of man to the rule of law
    (1979-present) informal social control.
  • Japan a new constitution following World War II.
    Criminal code that is predominantly German in
    nature.
  • Saudi Arabia no separate or formal
    constitution, however, the Basic Law (1993) and
    the Sharia fulfill a similar purpose some
    consider the Quran to be such. No published
    penal codes Islamic law. Sacred Law tradition.

10
Legal System
  • England Common Law and statutes.
  • France unity of civil and criminal courts.
  • Germany reflects both Civil Law tradition and
    Common Law tradition.
  • China centrally monitored hierarchical court
    system (courts are typically in collaboration
    with local political leaders to meet the ideals
    of the Communist party).
  • Japan hierarchical system modeled after
    European Civil Law and English-American legal
    traditions. Informal procedures such as
    compromise and mediation.
  • Saudi Arabia the king is the highest court of
    appeal in the land and is responsible for
    judicial appointments to religious courts.

11
Police
  • England Home Secretary.
  • France The Police Nationale and the Gendarmerie
    Police.
  • Germany The Laender or state governments
    administer police functions not contrary to the
    Basic Law.
  • China Supreme Peoples Procurate.
  • Japan National Police Safety Commission
    (administrative) and the National Police Agency
    (manages police duties).
  • Saudi Arabia Centralized and controlled by the
    minister of the interior.

12
Corrections
  • England Home Secretary.
  • France Ministry of Justice.
  • Germany The Laender or state government
    administer corrections not contrary to the Basic
    Law.
  • China Supreme Peoples Procurate.
  • Japan Ministry of Justice and the Prison Bureau.
  • Saudi Arabia Scrutiny by government-appointed
    religious leaders.

13
Question
  • How have the concepts of
  • content, context, and time
  • affected these
  • six nations?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com