Programme/Approved Electives for 2022/23
None
Available as a Free Standing Elective
No
Cri-10013 Criminal Justice, Process, Policy, Practice
Policing and the police are constantly in the news. Police investigations of serious crime - terrorism, murder, rape and robbery - make the headlines every day. They are also a staple of crime fiction on television, in films and print. But media headlines and TV cop shows tell us very little about what policing is really like. While the media concentrate on the police as crime fighters - the thin blue line between order and chaos - the reality of policing is both more varied and more challenging. This module aims to go behind the headlines and to answer some basic questions. What do we mean by policing? How does it relate to experiences and feelings of security? Who does policing and who are the police? How do the people and institutions responsible for policing relate to each other? What do the people we think of as the police actually do? And how is all of this changing as societies become more diverse, the threats to security more global in their origins and ways of responding to them more varied?The main focus of the module is on policing in England and Wales but in answering these questions we will draw on an international literature written by scholars and researchers from many other jurisdictions including the US, Canada, Australia and South Africa. We will also look in detail at: the structure and organization of the police; the development of policing; the main characteristics and conditions for existence of a distinctive culture within police organizations; and the powers of the police and how they are held to account for their use.
Aims
To introduce students to the development and contemporary practice of policing and the police, primarily with reference to England and Wales, but with international comparative aspects, theories and concepts where relevant. Although the focus is primarily on policing in England and Wales, students will also be introduced to a broader context of Britain as an increasingly multi-cultural society, and the socio-legal and policy responses to the policing of a multi-cultural society will be located in their broader global and post-colonial contexts.
Talis Aspire Reading ListAny reading lists will be provided by the start of the course.http://lists.lib.keele.ac.uk/modules/cri-20021/lists
Intended Learning Outcomes
Recognize the nature, diversity and impact of policing provision and its contribution to security with particular reference to the relationship between policing and social diversity in unequal societies: 1Critically engage with scholarly and policy debates about policing and the police, from the UK, from Europe and the US, and also from beyond these dominant traditions: 1Assess the role and contribution of the public police and other institutions through which policing is provided and how they relate to each other: 1Identify and evaluate the range of different strategies and approaches by which policing is undertaken, and the debates and controversies to which they have given rise: 1Distinguish between the mechanisms and institutions through which policing provision and the use of police powers are governed and held publicly accountable: 1
12 hours of synchronous and asynchronous activities relating to a conventional lecture type activity.12 hours of synchronous and asynchronous tutor led small groups/seminar activity.126 hours personal study, preparation for classes, assessment preparation
Description of Module Assessment
1: Essay weighted 100%2000 word essay - students select and answer ONE essay question from a list of questions provided to students.Students will attempt 1 essay question drawn from a list of questions that reflects the weekly topics covered in the module. Essay will be 2000 words in length.