Lecture
Field Study: The Instructor may undertake field trips to historical prison sites and courts in the US, Canada and other jurisdictions as determined.
Film and Web-based Resources
Lecture and Reading:
- Theoretical perspectives in Criminal Justice.
- Criminal law in ancient times.
- The emergence of criminal law and the evolving concept of crime and the criminal in England.
- The development of criminal law in America.
- Racism and the law.
- Slavery and post-emancipation law in America.
- The emergence of the police institution in England and America.
- The development of the police institution in Canada including provincial and municipal police forces.
- The history of drug laws and the alcohol prohibition era in North America.
- The history of eugenics theory in North America.
- Control of the "insane" and the rise of "mental institutions" in North America.
- The emergence and growth of the workhouse and the prison system in England and North America.
- 18th century reform of the prison, the Pennsylvania and Auburn prison systems.
- Convict labor, transportation and convict leasing.
- A history of women’s prisons.
- Historical correctional practices and the Indigenous peoples of North America, including residential schools.
- The development of the juvenile justice system.
At the conclusion of the course the student will be able to:
- Discuss the importance of politics in any consideration of crime and criminal justice development.
- Describe and analyze the concepts of freedom and liberty as they relate to deviant individuals or groups in a democratic and capitalist society.
- Identify historical evidence of the persistence of classism, racism and sexism in European, American and Canadian culture in the development of the criminal class.
- Identify political and legal forces that changed social attitudes over time towards inequality, poverty and marginalization.
- Describe the ways in which religious values and themes have shaped criminal justice issues and practices.
- Demonstrate in writing an in-depth understanding of the historical strategies and reactions to criminality and deviance.
- Identify and articulate current-day criminal justice challenges based on an accurate knowledge of the historical development of social control and criminal justice approaches.
- Compare and contrast 19th and 20th century correctional and criminal justice practice with innovative approaches to criminal justice in the new millennia.
- Apply academic research and writing skills for the required term paper.
Evaluation will be based on the course objectives and carried out in accordance with ÌÇÐÄvlog´«Ã½policy. The instructor will provide a written course outline with specific evaluation criteria at the beginning of the course. Evaluation will be based on the following:
- Examinations: midterm and final
- Class participation
- Term paper, project or presentation
An example of a possible evaluation scheme would be:
Mid term | 30% |
Final | 30% |
Term paper | 30% |
Class Participation | 10% |
Total | 100% |
Textbooks and Materials to be Purchased by Students:
Shelden, R.G., (2008). Controlling the Dangerous Classes: A History of Criminal Justice in America. (2nd ed.) Boston. Pearson.
Monchalin, Lisa. (2016). The Colonial Problem: An Indigenous Perspective on Crime and Injustice in Canada. North York, Ontario: University of Toronto Press.
Roth, Mitchel P. (2014). An Eye For an Eye: A Global History of Crime and Punishment. London, UK: Reaktion Books Ltd.
Hulbert, Margot A. (ed). (2018). Pursuing Justice: An Introduction to Justice Studies (2nd ed.). Halifax: Fernwood Publishing.
Additional readings as determined by course instructor.