NCJ Number
154398
Date Published
1995
Length
253 pages
Annotation
This book discusses the historical evolution of academic criminal justice, which began as law enforcement or police science and developed to encompass issues and agencies addressing crime.
Abstract
The book is divided into nine chapters, each representing a period in the development of academic criminal justice. The first period, 1870-1930, marked the beginning of academic politics and professionalism in many fields. The years 1910-1935 were characterized by progressivism and police education in the U.S. The third chapter discusses V-men, who worked under the principles of August Vollmer, and models of police education from 1935-1950. Overlapping with that period, between 1945 and 1960, was what the author terms the Berkeley Renaissance. Developments in the 1960's were influenced by the formation and activities of the International Association of Police Professors. During the same period, the School of Criminology at Berkeley was attacked and eventually eliminated, giving rise to two New York City-based schools of criminal justice education, the John Jay College of Police Science and the program at the State University of New York- Albany. The final two chapters deal with work conducted by the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences in two periods, between 1970 and 1980, and between 1975 and 1985. Chapter notes