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Test Bank for Comparative and International Criminal Justice Systems, 3rd Edition by Ebbe (All Chapters included) £24.13   Add to cart

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Test Bank for Comparative and International Criminal Justice Systems, 3rd Edition by Ebbe (All Chapters included)

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  • Module
  • Comparative and International Criminal Justice 3e
  • Institution
  • Comparative And International Criminal Justice 3e

Complete Test Bank for Comparative and International Criminal Justice Systems, 3rd Edition by Allison Anadi, Obi N. I. Ebbe ; ISBN13: 9781466560338......(Full Chapters included)...CHAPTER 1 – The Purpose of Comparative and International Criminal Justice Systems. CHAPTER 2 – Crime: Internationa...

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  • October 26, 2024
  • 131
  • 2013/2014
  • Exam (elaborations)
  • Questions & answers
  • Comparative and International Criminal Justice 3e
  • Comparative and International Criminal Justice 3e
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TEST BANK FOR
Comparative and
International Criminal
Justice Systems: Policing,
Judiciary, and Corrections,
Third Edition



by
Allison Anadi and
Obi N. I. Ebbe


** Immediate Download
** Swift Response
** All Chapters included

, INSTRUCTOR’S TEST BANK

Table of Contents
Page
CHAPTER 1 – The Purpose of Comparative and International Criminal Justice Systems 1
CHAPTER 2 – Crime: International and Comparative…………………………………… 16
CHAPTER 3 – Criminal Law…………………………………………………………….. 51
CHAPTER 4 – The Criminal Justice System in The United States……………………… 84
CHAPTER 5 – The Criminal Justice System of Ireland…………………………………. 123
CHAPTER 6 – The Criminal Justice System in Israel…………………………………… 176
CHAPTER 7 – The Criminal Justice System in Argentina………………………………. 219
CHAPTER 8 – The Criminal Justice System of Sierra Leone…………………………… 242
CHAPTER 9 – Administration of Justice in Poland………………………………………..279
CHAPTER 10 – The Criminal Justice System of Russia………………………………… 333
CHAPTER 11 – Interpol and International Police Cooperation…………………………. 366
CHAPTER 12 – Policing and Public Disorder in The United Kingdom……………….... 390
CHAPTER 13 – The Police System in The People’s Republic of China………………… 417
CHAPTER 14 – World Courts of Justice of the United Nations…………………………. 440
CHAPTER 15 – The judiciary and Criminal Procedure in Nigeria………………………. 481
CHAPTER 16 – The Islamic System of Criminal Justice………………………………… 519
CHAPTER 17 – The Court System in The People’s Republic of China with a Case Study
of a Criminal Trial…………………………………………………………. 546
CHAPTER 18 – United Nations provisions for Punishment of Offenders vis-à-vis
Punishment of Offenders in History………………………...…………….. 573
CHAPTER 19 – Guided Change in Japan: The Correctional Association prison Industrial
Cooperative and the Prison Industry……………………………………… 593
CHAPTER 20 – Treatment of Offenders in Denmark and Brazil………………………… 626
CHAPTER 21 – The Unique and Comparative Features of the Criminal Justice Systems,
International Law, and the World Courts………………………………….. 642

,CHAPTER 1/ The Purpose of Comparative and International Criminal Justice Systems


Multiple Choice Questions

1. The United States adopted which of the following correctional practices from Sweden
and the Netherlands?
a. Halfway houses
b. Day fines
c. Prison structures
*d. All of the above

2. Which of the following is among the seven substantive reasons for the study of
comparative and international criminal justice?
a. International character of the modern crime scene.
b. The usefulness of varied social control mechanisms and learning from others’
experiences.
c. Acquaintance in the nature and dynamics of the criminal law of nations.
*d. All of the above

3. Cultural values:
a. Are seldom considered in determining how to dispose of a criminal matter.
b. Define good behavior but fail to define bad behavior.
c. If sound, will not change as a result of international relations.
*d. Can change through international relations.

4. The study of the ways social order is achieved and maintained:
*a. Teaches us to modify our own society keeping in mind that what works for
one country may not work in another.
b. Reinforces the fact that the American system of criminal justice is superior
to every other system known.
c. Allows us to resist change.
d. All of the above.

5. English laws and cultural values overtook most of Nigerian society and condemned the
practice of:
a. Incarceration
b. Probation
*c. Outcasting offenders
d. Capital punishment




6. Which of the following is an example of a “multinational systemic crime?”

, a. Child abuse
*b. Illegal arms trafficking
c. Murder
d. Carjacking

7. Non-industrialized countries generally have:
*a. Lower crime rates than industrialized nations.
b. Higher crime rates than industrialized nations.
c. No ability to keep track of crime statistics.
d. Crime rates that are equal to those in industrialized nations.

8. The international character of crime has been evidenced in which type(s) of criminal
cases?
a. Terrorism
b. Money laundering
c. Narcotics trafficking
*d. All of the above

9. There are crimes perpetrated today in both western and non-western countries which have
foreign origins, including:
a. Acts of terrorism
b. Industrial burglary
c. Organized crime
*d. All of the above

10. The study of International and trans-national crimes help:
a. Local governments keep better crime statistics.
*b. Legitimate governments fend off threats to the lives of innocent citizens.
c. Governments pay for correctional services.
d. All of the above.

11. Non-industrialized countries generally have _________ than industrialized countries.
a. Better record keeping systems
b. More prisons
*c. Lower crime rates
d. All of the above

12. One of the advantages of using informal methods of social control in industrialized
countries is:
a. An increase in court revenue.
*b. The reduction of prison overcrowding.
c. People are usually happy with what the mediator decides.
d. All of the above.

13. In some developing countries, which of the following could be a mediator in a criminal or
civil matter?

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