This document contains a lesson on the Dragon Boat Festival in Chinese. It includes activities like listening to words being read aloud, coloring a dragon boat, matching pictures to sentences, cutting and pasting pictures, reading a story in pictures, and instructions for making a fragrant sachet. The activities help teach about traditions of the Dragon Boat Festival like eating zongzis, honoring the poet Chu Yuan, dragon boat races, and standing eggs.
The document discusses hi-tech crime, including computer crime, computer-related crime, and technology crime, detailing how technology changes the nature of crime and law enforcement's response. It explores various types of crimes, such as hacking, software piracy, and fraud, while highlighting the underreporting of such crimes and challenges in jurisdiction. Additionally, it addresses protective measures and the importance of education in preventing victimization in a technology-driven society.
The document discusses advancements in technology within the criminal justice system, particularly focusing on crime scene investigation and evidence gathering techniques such as fingerprint analysis and DNA technology. It highlights concepts like the chain of custody, the Daubert test for scientific evidence acceptance, and various investigative software used for case management. Additionally, it addresses the challenges surrounding DNA databases and the integration of digital photography and 3D representation in crime scene analysis.
The document discusses advancements in police technology, focusing on less-lethal use-of-force devices, traffic enforcement technologies, and safety equipment like body armor and automated external defibrillators. It highlights legal frameworks guiding police use of force, specific devices such as tasers and chemical agents, and technological improvements in detecting gunfire. Additionally, the document covers methods for vehicle pursuits and stopping offenders, emphasizing the importance of minimizing harm while effectively managing law enforcement situations.
The document discusses various theories of public policy making and their implications on decision-making within criminal justice. It outlines problems associated with different theories such as pluralism, bureaucratic challenges, and the public choice framework, highlighting issues like equity and self-interest. Additionally, it describes a general analysis process for defining problems, determining goals, constructing options, and evaluating alternatives to improve policy outcomes.
The document provides an overview of police technology, focusing on its role in improving efficiency, effectiveness, and community policing within law enforcement. It emphasizes the importance of information technology in tactical and strategic decision-making processes, highlights the need for partnerships and decentralized decision-making in community policing, and discusses the challenges of fragmentation in the criminal justice system. Additionally, it outlines the goals of crime prevention and situational crime prevention through education and problem-solving methods.
This document discusses emerging and future technologies that may be applied in law enforcement. It explores techniques used by futurists to predict technological developments and various applications including emergency location systems, automatic collision notification, universal product coding, radio frequency chipping of goods, biometric identification, satellite surveillance, pursuit technologies using vehicle disabling chips, less-lethal weapons, mobile access to databases, and combinations of technologies. The goal is to understand how future technologies could impact policing.
This document contains a lesson on the Dragon Boat Festival in Chinese. It includes activities like listening to words being read aloud, coloring a dragon boat, matching pictures to sentences, cutting and pasting pictures, reading a story in pictures, and instructions for making a fragrant sachet. The activities help teach about traditions of the Dragon Boat Festival like eating zongzis, honoring the poet Chu Yuan, dragon boat races, and standing eggs.
The document discusses hi-tech crime, including computer crime, computer-related crime, and technology crime, detailing how technology changes the nature of crime and law enforcement's response. It explores various types of crimes, such as hacking, software piracy, and fraud, while highlighting the underreporting of such crimes and challenges in jurisdiction. Additionally, it addresses protective measures and the importance of education in preventing victimization in a technology-driven society.
The document discusses advancements in technology within the criminal justice system, particularly focusing on crime scene investigation and evidence gathering techniques such as fingerprint analysis and DNA technology. It highlights concepts like the chain of custody, the Daubert test for scientific evidence acceptance, and various investigative software used for case management. Additionally, it addresses the challenges surrounding DNA databases and the integration of digital photography and 3D representation in crime scene analysis.
The document discusses advancements in police technology, focusing on less-lethal use-of-force devices, traffic enforcement technologies, and safety equipment like body armor and automated external defibrillators. It highlights legal frameworks guiding police use of force, specific devices such as tasers and chemical agents, and technological improvements in detecting gunfire. Additionally, the document covers methods for vehicle pursuits and stopping offenders, emphasizing the importance of minimizing harm while effectively managing law enforcement situations.
The document discusses various theories of public policy making and their implications on decision-making within criminal justice. It outlines problems associated with different theories such as pluralism, bureaucratic challenges, and the public choice framework, highlighting issues like equity and self-interest. Additionally, it describes a general analysis process for defining problems, determining goals, constructing options, and evaluating alternatives to improve policy outcomes.
The document provides an overview of police technology, focusing on its role in improving efficiency, effectiveness, and community policing within law enforcement. It emphasizes the importance of information technology in tactical and strategic decision-making processes, highlights the need for partnerships and decentralized decision-making in community policing, and discusses the challenges of fragmentation in the criminal justice system. Additionally, it outlines the goals of crime prevention and situational crime prevention through education and problem-solving methods.
This document discusses emerging and future technologies that may be applied in law enforcement. It explores techniques used by futurists to predict technological developments and various applications including emergency location systems, automatic collision notification, universal product coding, radio frequency chipping of goods, biometric identification, satellite surveillance, pursuit technologies using vehicle disabling chips, less-lethal weapons, mobile access to databases, and combinations of technologies. The goal is to understand how future technologies could impact policing.