U.S. Criminal Justice Interest Groups: Institutional Profiles
By (Author) Michael Hallett
By (author) Dennis Palumbo
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Greenwood Press
30th September 1993
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
364.973
Hardback
152
How do 100 major criminal justice groups in the United States work to affect public policies dealing with criminal justice in all its aspects Institutional analyses are arranged alphabetically, describing the groups in terms of their history, purpose, principal activities and concerns in relation to Congress, and key resource materials. Appendices list the organizations with their addresses and regular publications. The authors summarize their work statistically and provide the survey questionnaire the groups all received. A brief bibliography points to a few significant sources on criminal justice groups as a whole. Internal cross-references and a full index make the reference easily accessible to students, teachers, and professionals.
This guide will be of value to librarians and researchers in specialized cillections. Recommended for purchase by large research collections and special collections in law and criminal justice.-Reference Books Bulletin
"This guide will be of value to librarians and researchers in specialized cillections. Recommended for purchase by large research collections and special collections in law and criminal justice."-Reference Books Bulletin
MICHAEL A. HALLETT is Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice Administration at Middle Tennessee State University. He has published a number of articles in journals on subjects ranging from news media coverage of the HIV/AIDS crisis to the politics of criminal justice program evaluation. DENNIS J. PALUMBO is Professor in the School of Justice Studies and Director of the Ph.D. Program at Arizona State University. He has written at length on criminal justice, public policy, and public administration. His books include Contemporary Public Administration (1991), Implementation and the Policy Process: Opening Up the Black Box (Greenwood, 1990), and Criminal Justice in American Law in Action (1986).