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VISION FOR TOMORROW: ASSIMILATING DIVERSITY IN FLORIDA'S CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM

NCJ Number
142474
Date Published
1993
Length
109 pages
Annotation
Recognizing the unique needs of criminal justice executives, the Florida Legislature created the Florida Criminal Justice Executive Institute (FCJEI) in 1990 and subsequently required the institute to develop a multifaceted training program for potential or newly appointed managers and executives and to recognize human diversity in Florida's criminal justice system.
Abstract

The issue of human diversity is a critical variable in the criminal justice system. Every person involved in the criminal justice system, whether as a job applicant, recruit, manager, or executive, confronts diversity. The FCJEI is designed to confront diversity in the criminal justice system by training criminal justice managers and executives. The focus is not just on race and culture but, more important on age, ability, and other characteristics associated with Florida's changing demographics. The institute has two primary courses of study, the Chief Executive Seminar and the Senior Leadership Program. Each program maintains a futures orientation and pays particular attention to changes in demographics and the impact of increasing diversity on criminal justice agency management. The Florida Department of Corrections serves as an example of the range of policies and activities associated with assimilating diversity. The Job Tasks Analysis (JTA) for criminal justice managers and executives is noted as one approach to determining human performance requirements of chief executive positions. FCJEI activities that recognize human diversity are outlined, and a study of possible racial or ethnic bias in Florida's criminal justice system work force is reported.