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The impact of Miranda (3 peer reviewed sources) (2)

The impact of Miranda (3 peer reviewed sources)

Vidal, S., Cleary, H., Woolard, J., & Michel, J. (2017). Adolescents’ legal socialization: Effects of interrogation and Miranda knowledge on legitimacy, cynicism, and procedural justice. Youth Violence and Juvenile Justice, 15(4), 419-440.

The study’s goal was to determine how detained youths’ opinions about the involvement, equality, and reliability of police are affected by their actual interactions with the law, such as how often they come into contact with the police and whether or not they are aware of Miranda warnings and interrogation practices. As a result of these encounters, people had a lower regard for police legitimacy, were less inclined to follow the law, and had a more pessimistic view of the justice system overall. Interrogation techniques experts felt less obligated to follow the law and the rules of procedure, while Miranda warnings experts felt more bound by the rules of procedure to follow. Adolescents at risk may benefit from programs that promote positive interactions between them and police officers in order to reduce negative attitudes toward law enforcement and foster a sense of trust and fairness. This period is when an individual’s attitudes and views toward various societal institutions and values are formed. Law education can have significant effects on how adolescents respond in different legal contexts and behave, while also encouraging a more long-term and comprehensive view of the law. Knowledge of and fully comprehend the processes and techniques used during the interrogations, as well as dialogues with law enforcement agencies, as we’ve learned from detained youth, can influence how criminals interpret legal procedures, which, in turn, influences how they see and perceive police and the law. On the basis of the data collected here, it appears that legal socialization principles are closely linked to offending adolescents’ real-world experience, familiarity, and comprehension of legal procedures and processes are obliged. Unfair treatment and case outcomes for juveniles by police can have a negative impact on the lives of everyone involved even when those interactions are not always irrational.Therefore, increased knowledge and experience with juvenile justice processes may not always result in more positive attitudes and beliefs towards law enforcement and the legal system. Despite this, our research indicates that criminals who lack social support may benefit from legal socialization as a strategy for intervention. Encouraging better relationships between young people and law enforcement can help combat negative public perceptions of the justice system while also helping to build trust and respect among the general public.

Thomas III, G. C., & Leo, R. A. (2002). The effects of Miranda v. Arizona:" Embedded" in our national culture?. Crime and Justice, 29, 203-271.

It was mandated that police inform suspects of their constitutional rights before questioning them while in custody after the Miranda v. Arizona case. Before any confession could be used against them in court, suspects had to knowingly and intelligently waive their Miranda rights. Since the Supreme Court’s interpretation of Miranda, suspects have been informed that they have the right to resist police interrogation instead of being urged to do so. To better reflect American law and culture, the Miranda ruling protects a suspect’s "free choice" of whether or not to answer police questions during interrogation. There has been no discernible impact on police ability to obtain confessions or prosecutors’ ability to secure convictions after two generations of empirical research on Miranda requirements. Neither the decrease in confession rates nor the increase in criminal justice system costs can be demonstrated with certainty thanks to Miranda. Miranda’s benefits to detained suspects may be non-existent as well. Miranda and the rules that govern its citation have been violated numerous times by police officers who have devised ways to avoid, circumvent, nullify, or simply ignore Miranda. Whether or not police interrogation rooms should have a Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination can be debated by scholars and historians. Instead of the culture believing innately in Miranda’s requirement for notice, the opposite is likely to be true. So police were allowed to question the suspect because Miranda did not forbid or demand the presence of a lawyer during the interrogation. There was some information provided to presumed self-sufficient agents about the consequences of answering or refusing police questions. Miranda’s criticisms were taken seriously by Fourth Circuit judges, but the Supreme Court ultimately saw Miranda warnings as a matter of basic fairness rather than a safe haven for criminals, despite Fourth Circuit judges’ sympathies. In light of what Miranda Dickerson said, this explanation makes sense. Cassell, Grano, and the other Miranda dissenters were heard by a conservative court of appeals. Warnings were mandated to be fair to suspects by letting them know they did not have to convict themselves, even if the Miranda Court was correct. This right to protect oneself from coercion may allow a small concession to be made no matter how guilty someone is found to be.

Cassell, P. G. (1996). Miranda’s negligible effect on law enforcement: Some skeptical observations. Harv. JL & Pub. Pol’y, 20, 327.

"Miranda has no effect on law enforcement." many of the nation’s top criminal procedure academics have told and retold this story.Warming to the task, some even go so far as to maintain that the Miranda requirements "actually facilitate law enforcement efforts."Yet, consider for a moment the striking incongruity of the tale. To a degree unparalleled in our nation’s history, Miranda restricts police interrogation of criminal suspects the "nerve center of crime detection." It requires every criminal suspect to be encouraged, before custodial questioning, to keep quiet. It allows suspects to prevent any police questioning by the simple expedients of declining to waive their rights or asking for a lawyer. Such constraints make no difference at all!?

This Article raises some skeptical notes about this conventional wisdom.The myth of Miranda’s benign effects is unsupported and unsupportable in the available empirical data. To the contrary, there is every reason to believe our intuitions have it right in suggesting indeed, crying out that Miranda has impeded law enforcement. Miranda’s costs should be given more consideration as we owe it to those harmed by unsolved crimes and unconvicted criminals. Before turning specifically to Miranda’s harms, let me note in passing that this Article will not develop at any length another promising line of attack against Miranda: that nothing in the Fifth Amendment authorized the Court to create such a code-like set of rules. That sort of conclusion seems almost preordained. It is hard to argue that Miranda follows from the constitutional history and traditions of this country. Professor Grano’s thorough book Confessions, Truth and the Law’ explicates this point brilliantly. Indeed, one of the other participants in this Panel, Professor Stephen Schulhofer, recently acknowledged that the Miranda holding was "a radical departure .from the assumption of the times" and thatIn light of then-current precedent, Miranda’s attorneys decided not to pursue the Fifth Amendment claim because the approach to regulating police interrogation proposed by the Amendment seemed so out of step. The characterization that the moderator of this Panel, Professor Ely, has given to Roe v. Wade seems equally applicable to Miranda. The decision, he wrote, is bad "because it is not constitutional law and gives almost no sense of an obligation to try to be."

While Miranda’s social costs are significant in themselves, what makes them an undeniable tragedy is that they are in large measure avoidable. Interrogation regulations consistent with the historical understanding of the Fifth Amendment include many approaches, and Miranda is only one example of such a strategy. Before Miranda, a wide range of options were under consideration, such as taking arrested suspects to magistrates for questioning or tape- recording police interrogations, as the American Law Institute proposed around the time of Miranda.” The longstanding, pre- Miranda “voluntariness test” must also be regarded as a constitutionally viable, less-costly approach to regulating police questioning." All these alternatives would lead to many more confessions, and thus more convictions, of dangerous criminal suspects. Some of them, such as videotaping, would undoubtedly provide better protection for innocent suspects." Yet Miranda’s supporters seem uninterested in finding the least restrictive constitutional means of regulating society’s agents of law and order. Instead, Miranda seems to have petrified the discussion about how to regulate police questioning.

It is time for a new Miranda narrative not the myth that it is costless to indulge this Warren Court invention, but an accurate account of real-world consequences from unprecedented shackles on the police. As common sense told us all along, tradeoffs inhere in the Miranda regime no less than in other controversial social policies. So far, legal academics (or the Court itself, for that matter) have failed to offer a convincing explanation of why we should ignore the human suffering Miranda inflicts.From the top of the ivory tower, these human costs may not seem important. However, the countless victims of Miranda’s crimes would undoubtedly have a different perspective.

The impact of mass communication on Women

The impact of mass communication on Women

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Women are an essential instrument in society, but they have been neglected and discriminated against in the past. The women were seen as home keepers, and their only concern was to take care of the children at home and mend for their husbands. Nonetheless, women have seen a transformation since the invention of the mass media. The women have been fighting for their rights and to be included in various sectors of the industry. Thereby enabling them to grow socially and financially. Other people are also being influenced by helping women acquire their positions in society due to the effect of the media. Now, women from different points of the world can meet via social media and share their problems, intending to find solutions and advance themselves (Tamplin, Mclean & Paxton, 2018). Nonetheless, some researchers are opposing the change terming it as dangerous as it tends to magnify the women’s needs at the expense of the men. Women are slowly being empowered to take up more responsibilities in society and advance themselves due to social media’s influence.

According to Tamplin, Mclean & Paxton (2018), women have been used in spreading vices on social media. For Example, they use their body in advancing drinking habits and other undesired behavior in society. In the study, women and men are encouraged to increase their literacy skills on social media’s effects on adult’s body image. Nonetheless, some researchers have proven that Women are simply looking and continually advocating for inclusion in all sectors of the country to increase representation and reduce biasness. Therefore, the high number of women in politics and other sectors is rampantly growing due to their influence on social media. Any oppression of women is used on social media to influence more people to help in the campaigns.

Reference

Tamplin, N. C., McLean, S. A., & Paxton, S. J. (2018). Social media literacy protects against the negative impact of exposure to appearance ideal social media images in young adult women but not men. Body Image, 26, 29-37.

Race and Ethnicity in Mass Incarceration

Race and Ethnicity in Mass Incarceration

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Introduction

The United States has one of the highest incarceration rates in the world. There are many factors contributing to this worrying trend, one of which could be the country’s high population. However, when compared to other countries per capita, the US still comes first. Other countries with a higher population, such as China, have a lower criminal incarceration rate than the US. Within the topic of mass incarceration, a critical point of focus is the higher rate of imprisonment for minority groups. The research question in this case is, does race and ethnicity play a role in the US’ criminal incarceration rates? The most effective way to answer this question is to examine statistics on mass incarceration and compare rates in different racial groups. Minority groups such as African-Americans are imprisoned at a rate five times higher than that of whites, and in some states, this rate can go as high as ten times (Jeffers, 2019). The criminal justice system should be unbiased and impartial, yet racial disparities in incarceration prove otherwise.

In this paper, I will argue that race and ethnicity play a significant role in incarceration rates within the US. Minority groups such as African-Americans and Hispanics have higher incarceration rates than the white majority, meaning that race plays a role in the criminal justice system. However, this is not to say that being a minority means that one is automatically sent to jail. Instead, some systemic and institutional practices increase the likelihood of minority individuals getting sent to prison. One point in favour of this argument is the structural disadvantages that minority groups face in terms of poverty, employment, education and others (Hetey & Eberhardt, 2018). Second, established policies and practices such as harsh drug laws, stop and frisk policies contribute to higher incarceration for minority groups. Another vital factor is implicit bias in the justice system against minority groups, where there are many negative perceptions regarding people of colour. These factors are the main reasons why the country has higher incarceration rates for minority groups.

Social and Political Context

Mass incarceration in the country is a serious social and political issue. Some of the major actors involved include political leaders such as local, state and federal representatives. On the social front, human rights and justice groups such as the Sentencing Project and the Innocence Project fight to create awareness and policy reform on mass incarceration. Most of the major players in criminal justice, social and political leaders agree that there is a problem with how the system handles minority groups. Multiple laws have been introduced in the US legislature to address racial bias in the criminal justice system. Most recently, these bills include the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act of 2020 and the JUSTICE Act (Pettit & Sykes, 2015). Social actors have also made efforts to address racial disparities in criminal justice; for example, The Sentencing Project published a manual on the issue in 2016 titled, ‘Reducing Racial Disparity in the Criminal Justice System: A Manual for Practitioners and Policymakers.’

Critique

Structural Disadvantages

One primary reason for racial disparities in mass incarceration is structural disadvantages. Minorities tend to be imprisoned at a higher rate due to disadvantages they face right from their communities. African-Americans and other minority groups are more likely to come from more impoverished neighbourhoods due to disproportionate investment in social resources (Gase et al., 2016). These structural disadvantages can be seen in education, healthcare, housing, poverty, employment and family differences. The Sentencing Project reports that about 60% of African-Americans live in impoverished, segregated neighbourhoods with high crime levels (Omori, 2017). Poverty is a major contributor to crime in these neighbourhoods as most people are poorly educated and unemployed. These structural disadvantages are intertwined, creating an environment that promotes crime, leading to imprisonment.

A possible rebuttal of the structural disadvantages argument is that the US system is based on meritocracy. Any person can get an education, work hard and improve their lives regardless of their background. Race and ethnicity do not block anyone from going to school, starting a business or getting a job. The majority of incarcerated individuals from minority groups chose a path of crime, and they must be punished for it. Although this point is a valid one, the fact remains that most of the time, the odds are stacked against some groups, making it almost impossible to fight against the system. For example, even if an individual from a poor, minority family and neighbourhood wanted to get an education, the schools in their communities are underfunded, and they cannot afford the costs of higher education. Getting a good job without a quality education is very difficult. This sequence of events explains how easily one could turn to crime due to hopelessness.

Policies and Practices

The policies and practices established within the criminal justice system also contribute to the racial disparities in mass incarceration. When these policies are executed with a bias towards one group of people, it affects them more. Discrimination can be seen right from the initial point of contact with law enforcement. A perfect example of this is the stop and frisk policy which allows officers to stop individuals and search them at the slightest suspicion (Coviello & Persico, 2015). This policy unfairly targets specific areas of groups, mainly those with minority populations. These policies create criminal records for thousands of minorities, which increases their likelihood of imprisonment with subsequent offences. Another policy that negatively affects minorities is pre-trial detention due to poverty. When one cannot pay their bail, they have to stay in custody until they are tried. Minority offenders, mainly black and Hispanic males, receive harsher punishment for similar crimes as their white counterparts.

One possible counterargument for this idea is that no one can be arrested or imprisoned without committing a crime. It is impossible for a police officer to arrest an innocent individual, and the courts convict them for a non-existent offence. Every offender must be prepared to face the consequences of their crime, regardless of their demographics. Although this is quite true, the fact remains that an officer determined to find a crime will usually find one. There is a generally negative perception that individuals of colour tend to be criminals, so officers target them with policies such as stop and frisk. When they complain about unfair treatment, they will be arrested for resisting and refusing to cooperate with officers. Such scenarios are quite common, showing that officers’ bias will determine who gets arrested and get a criminal record, increasing their chances of imprisonment.

Conclusion

In summary, race and ethnicity play a significant role in incarceration within the US. Minority groups are more likely than majority groups to be sent to prison for the same offence. Some of the factors that contribute to the situation include policies in the criminal justice system and structural disadvantages minorities face. The criminal justice system should ensure that every individual gets justice, but instead, it perpetuates injustice. Social and political stakeholders need to work together to make sure that no particular group is unfairly targeted. Rather than rely on imprisonment as the only form of punishment or rehabilitation, other social programs should be considered, especially those that make a positive difference for offenders.

References

Coviello, Decio, and Nicola Persico. 2015. “An economic analysis of Black-White disparities in the New York Police Department’s stop-and-frisk program.” The Journal of Legal Studies 44.2: 315-360.

Gase, Lauren Nichol, et al. 2016. “Understanding racial and ethnic disparities in arrest: the role of individual, home, school, and community characteristics.” Race and social problems 8.4: 296-312.

Hetey, Rebecca C., and Jennifer L. Eberhardt. 2018. “The numbers don’t speak for themselves: Racial disparities and the persistence of inequality in the criminal justice system.” Current Directions in Psychological Science 27.3: 183-187.

Huq, Aziz Z. 2016. “The consequences of disparate policing: Evaluating stop and frisk as a modality of urban policing.” Minn. L. Rev. 101: 2397.

Jeffers, Janie L. 2019. “Justice is not blind: Disproportionate incarceration rate of people of color.” Social work in public health 34.1: 113-121.

Light, Michael T., and Jeffery T. Ulmer. 2016. “Explaining the gaps in white, black, and Hispanic violence since 1990: Accounting for immigration, incarceration, and inequality.” American Sociological Review 81.2: 290-315.

Omori, Marisa. 2017. “Spatial dimensions of racial inequality: Neighborhood racial characteristics and drug sentencing.” Race and Justice 7.1: 35-58.

Pettit, Becky, and Bryan L. Sykes. 2015. “Civil rights legislation and legalized exclusion: Mass incarceration and the masking of inequality.” Sociological Forum. Vol. 30.

Pettit, Becky, and Carmen Gutierrez. 2018. “Mass incarceration and racial inequality.” American Journal of Economics and Sociology 77.3-4: 1153-1182.

Vogel, Matt, and Lauren C. Porter. 2016. “Toward a demographic understanding of incarceration disparities: Race, ethnicity, and age structure.” Journal of quantitative criminology 32.4: 515-530.