Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Crime and Punishment
1900-Present Day
- Crime and Criminals
- 1900-1955
- Slow,
gradual
rise in
crime
rate
- Impact
of WWII
- Blitz - criminals
took
advantage.
Loot bombed
houses
- Black market
developed due to
rationing.
- Crime rate
expected to fall
after 1945 - it
didn't
- 1955 key
turning point -
significant
increase in
crime after this
point
- Murder rate does
decrease but only
because medical
advance keeps
victims alive
- Rapid rise 1955-Present
- Football Hoolilganism
- Peak in
1970s &
80s
- e.g. 1984 Heysel -
Liverpool fans
riot - wall
collapses - 39
dead
- Reduced
since
late 80s
- CCTV
- prices rise =
wealthier fans who
don't want to fight
- Stadiums are
now seated -
numbers in
grounds now
strictly controlled
- Car
Crime
- Alcohol
limits first in
place 1967
- 1983 - seat
belts
compulsory
- 1992 -
speed
cameras
- 1896 - first
car crime.
Speeding at
8mph! Speed
limit in towns
was 2mph!
- Race/hate
crimes
- Became an
issue after
sudden rise in
immigration
following WWII
- Came from
Commonwealth
countries. HMS
Windrush 1st ship.
- Race Relation
Acts passed -
1965, '68 & '76
- Made it a crime
to deny jobs
on account of
race
- Now a crime
to
encourage
racial
hatred
- However:
Didn't change
much - race
crime
continued
- Stephen
Lawrence murder
(1993) became
turning point
- Inquiry found
police were
'institutionally
racist'
- New laws - 'hate
crimes'
introduced -
tougher
sentences if
crimes
motivated by
racism,
homophobia etc
- Caused police
to take new
approach -
training,
recruitment
etc.
- Drugs
- Early issues:
Cocaine sent to
soldiers in WWI -
army
complained so
banned in 1920
- Became big
prob in 1960s
-hippies etc.
- 1971 Misuse
of Drugs Act
- Aim: stamp
out growing
drug
culture
- However: Drug use and
smuggling continued
to rise.
- Harsh sentences:
14yrs for supply of
Class A - increased
to life in 1985
- Classes
of drugs -
A, B & C
- Causes lots of
crime - theft to
pay for drugs,
assaults,
organised crime
gangs etc
- Cyber
Crime
- Sparked by rise of
the internet in
1990s
- Illegal
downloading -
films, music etc -
makes otherwise
honest people
criminals
- Online banking -
opportunities for
fraud.
- 2015 - cyber
crime included
in crime stats
for 1st time -
official crime
rate doubled!
- Enforcement
- Police force
- Reasons for less
positive view
since 1950s
- Police Cars - less
'bobbies on the
beat'
- Traffic offences - lots of
otherwise law abiding
people caught for
speeding, using mobiles
etc
- Corruption - 1980s,
West Midlands force
revealed to be
corrupt. 2014 - West
Yorkshire force
admitted covering up
mistakes in 1989
Hilsborough disaster
- Important
changes since
1900
- Organisation: used to
be 200 seperate forces,
1964 this changed -
now only 43
- Recruitment training
and pay: 1900 -
untrained,
uneducated working
class men. Now - men,
women, well
educated, decent pay
- Specialisation:
Now have
specialist teams for
everything e.g.
crowd/riot control,
armed response,
forensics, anti
terrorism
- Use of
weapons -
ordinary
spolice still
dont carry
guns. But 5%
specialist
offices now
do. Also new
weaposn like
tasers,
pepper spray.
- Courts
- 1971 Courts Act: assizes,
quater sessions, etc all
abolished. Replaced by
Crown Courts
- Women: 1919 - Women
can be on juries. 1920 - 1st
female magistrate (JP).
Women now outnumber
male magistrates
- Juvenile
Courts: 1908
juvenile courts
introduced for
7-16 yr olds
- Crown Prosecution
Service: police used to
decide if a case went to
court. 1986 - CPS
introduced, their job to
decide if evidence is good
enough to have a trial.
- Juries: 1974 - no longer have to
own property (be rich basically!)
to be on a jury. Internet causes
problems - trials have to be
restarted if jurors are found to
have researched the crime online
- New Technology
- Identifying
Criminals
- 1901 -
Discovery of
diff blood
groups
- 1902 - Finger
prints first
used in court
- 1984 - discovery
all DNA is
unique - DNA
fingerprinting
used ever since.
- Communication
- 1929 - Blue
police tlephone
boxes
intorduced in
London
- Mid 1960s -
radios installed
in cars, 1969 1st
portable radios
- Computers mean
that data can be
stored or records
checked quickly and
easily
- Surveillance
- CCTV -
monitors
traffic and
pedestrians
- phones, emails, texts
are frequently
monitored - 650,000
times in 2015
- Punishment
- Capital
punishement
- Arguments
for
- deterrent
- mistakes
are
rare
- Life
for
a
life
- Arguments
against
- mistakes
can
be
made
- Killing is
wrong - Govt
shouldn't do
it
- Moves
towards
abolition
- 1908 -
banned
for under
16s
- 1947 - House of Commons
voted for abolition,
House of Lords blocked it
- Derek Bentley -
mental age 10 -
executed -
public outcry
- 1957 Abolished but
kept for murder of
police officer 1969
Abolished for all
murders
- Prison
- Prison reform
- Sir
Alexander
Paterson
1922-47
- 'prison is a
punishment not for
punishment'
- Reforms: Heads not
shaved, silence rules
relaxed, education of
prisoners, meaningful work
paid small amounts for
work
- Move towards
REHABILITATION
- Separate prison for
mentally ill
patients -
Broadmoor
Hospital
- By end of century
still problems -
overcrowding, riots,
very expensive
- Young
offenders
- Young
offenders sent
to 'Borstals'
not full prison
- Still very
tough
- 1988 - Borstals
replaced by
Young
Offenders
institutions for
18-20
- Lots of
education
- 1908 - Parliament sets a
minimum age you can be
responsible for a crime - 7 yrs
old
- Age changes over
century -
currently 10
- Alternatives
- Community
service
- Unpaid work
- Electronic
tags
- Parole - early
release - return
to prison if break
conditions
- Corporal
Punishment
- Whipping - used
as punishment for
centuries.
- Moves
towards
end
- 1933 - ended for
young
offenders
- 1948 -
abolished as a
punishment for
adults
- 1962 - abolished
as punishment in
prisons