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Criminal Justice Education and Training in North Carolina History and Development from 1920 to 1980

NCJ Number
96444
Journal
International Journal of Comparative and Applied Criminal Justice Volume: 8 Issue: 2 Dated: (Winter 1984) Pages: 228-244
Author(s)
J J Bowe
Date Published
1984
Length
16 pages
Annotation
This paper examines and analyzes primary and secondary data relative to the history and development of criminal justice education and training in North Carolina for six decades.
Abstract
Emphasis is focused on the early attempts to provide education and training for criminal justice personnel from 1920 to 1940, the expansion and improvement in criminal justice education and training from 1940 to 1960, and the establishment of criminal justice education and training programs in two-year community colleges and technical institutes and four-year senior public and private postsecondary education institutions from 1960 to 1980. In addition to discussing the similarities and differences in the methods utilized by institutions to establish criminal justice education and training programs, this paper discusses the curricula, course offerings, and characteristics of the faculties, as well as internal and external conditions, forces, and factors that influenced the history and development of education and training programs for criminal justice personnel. As a result of the impact of these and various influences from within police departments and individual institutions, educational and governmental state agencies, and from demands and needs of criminal justice personnel and society for better protection and safety, criminal justice education and training programs were in force at 15 two-year community colleges, 30 two-year technical institutes, 10 four-year senior, public institutions, and eight four-year, senior, private institutions in North Carolina in 1978. (Publisher abstract)