An examination of three well-known data security breaches and how they could have been deterred.
Analytical Essay # 125660 |
500 words (
approx. 2 pages ) |
3 sources |
APA | 2008
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$ 10.95
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Abstract
The paper considers data security measures that would have deterred data security breaches at BankAmerica, TCI and ChoicePoint.
From the Paper
"Data security breaches can take a variety of forms, from sophisticated hacker break-ins to curious employees looking at data for which they have no legitimate need. The results can be relatively minor, such as employees knowing one another's salaries, to criminal, as when data security breaches result in theft. This research considers three well-known data security breaches and steps that might have been taken to deter them.
"ChoicePoint is a data aggregator, meaning that it collects data from various sources, public and private..."
Tags:data security, data security breaches, TCI, ChoicePoint, BankAmerica
A discussion of whether capital punishment deters murder.
Persuasive Essay # 17163 |
1,386 words (
approx. 5.5 pages ) |
7 sources |
MLA | 2002
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$ 27.95
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Abstract
This paper looks at how the amount of crime increases every day and how governments are working over time to fight this disaster and reduce it. It shows how some countries adopt capital punishment as one of the best ways of deterring crime and how others that have abolished capital punishment are trying to show the negligible effect of this kind of punishment. It examines how the United States of America, the only western country that uses death penalty suffers from a huge amount of offense from other countries. It evaluates how statistics have proved that there is no real positive effect with capital punishment and what makes capital punishment ineffective are errors in judgments such as lack of justice and natural mistakes.
From the Paper
"In addition, the positive effects of death penalty on rate of crime are not proved. For many years it was thought that capital punishment is a deterrence of crime but later, when statistics became expanded, statisticians express that the idea that states with capital punishment have a lower crime rate is wrong. McManus (1998) expresses that states without the death penalty have fewer homicides than states those use death penalty. Massachusetts that has been abolished the death penalty, as an example, has the fewest crime rates in the United States of America (McManus, M., 1998). Similarly, Bonner and Fessenden (2000) illustrate that during the last twenty years, the rate of murder in states with capital punishment has been forty eight percent to more than one hundred percent higher than states with no capital punishment."
Tags:crime, death, deter, murder, penalty, punishment, reduce
A brief discussion and recommendation on the targeting of theft crimes in Las Vegas.
Term Paper # 146872 |
874 words (
approx. 3.5 pages ) |
3 sources |
APA | 2011
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$ 18.95
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Abstract
The paper discusses how Las Vegas has a problem with crimes involving various types of thefts. The paper explains why focusing on the current theft cases will be in the interests of the citizens of Las Vegas. The paper specifically recommends the use of forensic techniques to solve these theft crimes.
From the Paper
"Las Vegas is a city which is associated with good times, laughter, and great adventures. Yet, the city is threatened by budding crime which not only has the potential to cause pain and suffering in the lives of the locals, but also but a damper on the multi-billion dollar tourist industry set in place there. Out of all of the crimes committed within the coveted city limits of Las Vegas, Nevada, theft proves most apparent. Crimes from robbery, and especially car theft, have proven to be higher than the national average and place locals and tourists in danger. With the local attitude of wanting to fiercely protect not only their own interests, but also the thriving tourism industry they depend on, law enforcement should place much more effort in deterring and resolving crimes of theft; potentially through such new routes as applying a budding forensic science department within certain theft cases."
Tags:forensics, investigators, robbery, tourism
An overview of four methods of punishment and their success in deterring crime.
Term Paper # 116846 |
1,118 words (
approx. 4.5 pages ) |
8 sources |
APA | 2009
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$ 23.95
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Abstract
This paper closely examines the different methods of punishment that include retribution, deterrence, rehabilitation and societal protection. The paper describes how each punishment works, whether it deters crime or possibly results in further crimes, and which presents the best option for punishing criminals. The paper concludes that rehabilitation is the best deterrent to criminal acts, and although it is treating the symptom as opposed to the disease, better education and jobs cannot be anything but positive.
Outline:
Retribution
Deterrence
Rehabilitation
Social Protection
From the Paper
"Deterrence is based upon the idea that criminals are reasoning human beings, who commit criminal acts because it is a rational choice for them to do so: the demographics suggesting that criminal acts are prompted by social goals (such as Merton's 'Strain' theory: "Innovation involves accepting the cultural goal (financial success), but rejecting the conventional means (hard work at a 'straight' job), in favor of unconventional means (street crime)" (Macionis, 2006). By making the risk of punishment greater than the reward, deterrence implies that criminals will make a conscious choice between crime and remaining law abiding. This idea ignores issues about environment, poverty, and social pressure."
Tags:retribution, deterrence, rehabilitation, societal, protection
An examination of the history and evolution of punishment in U.S. prisons and its effectiveness in deterring crime.
Essay # 15270 |
1,575 words (
approx. 6.3 pages ) |
12 sources |
2000
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$ 30.95
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"In recent years, society has become more fearful of crime and more concerned that the criminal justice system does not deter violent crime as it should. Fear of crime is a driving force in elections and political battles. The desire of the people for tougher sentences can run afoul of the Constitution and its prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment, among other provisions.
From the Paper
"In recent years, society has become more fearful of crime and more concerned that the criminal justice system does not deter violent crime as it should. Fear of crime is a driving force in elections and political battles. The desire of the people for tougher sentences can run afoul of the Constitution and its prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment, among other provisions. The issue of cruel and unusual punishment is often argued with reference to the death penalty, but it has applications in other punitive situations. The concept of what does and does not constitute cruel and unusual punishment has evolved in decisions by the U.S. Supreme Court over the years, and the present state of the issue has developed from earlier views and cases. Yet, of equal importance is the issue of whether tougher punishment serves its intended purpose and..."
This paper is about capital punishment and wither it is a deterrent to crime or murder.
Argumentative Essay # 148116 |
1,965 words (
approx. 7.9 pages ) |
6 sources |
APA | 2011
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$ 37.95
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This paper introduces, discusses, and analyzes the topic of criminal justice and capital punishment. Capital punishment is said to be a deterrent to crime and murder and the paper discusses many studies that have shown that capital punishment is a deterrent to murder. It also shows the opposite perspective that it does not deter crime or murder. It also presents other arguments for and against capital punishment.
From the Paper
"Research also shows that much of the evidence used in death penalty studies can be skewed by the results of one state. Texas executes more prisoners than any other state. Researchers Sunstein and Vermeule found that one study was discredited for saying capital punishment is a deterrent because it based its evidence on data that included Texas for the final results. They found when the Texas data was removed from the remaining results, no deterrent was evident (Sunstein & Vermeule, 2005)."
Tags:capital punishment, murder, criminal justice
This paper discusses that the death penalty is not effective because it does not successfully serve the purpose of threatening criminals or deterring criminals from committing illegal acts.
Term Paper # 64010 |
2,290 words (
approx. 9.2 pages ) |
7 sources |
APA | 2005
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$ 42.95
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This paper explains that since ancient times the death penalty for various types of crimes and in various forms of execution has been used by societies especially societies, which were based on scriptural rules often tied up in religion and providing a public spectacle. The author points out several arguments against the death penalty such as (1) racial discrimination, which is striking when examining the statistics of over-representation by minority and low-come persons sitting on death row and (2) the irreversible nature of the death penalty especially since many people on death row have later been declared innocent. The paper states that state-sponsored execution draws criticism from international sources -- only China and Iran are ahead of the U.S. in terms of state-sanctioned execution.
From the Paper
"Currently, the majority of states in the U.S. do have the death penalty as a system of state-sponsored execution. Traditionally, the south has tended to be more pro-death-penalty, and racial lines of division are also traditionally highlighted in this region. An overrepresentation of minorities on death row is accepted by most sources as a statistically proven fact, and only a few sources disagree. Added to this is that most sources also tend to agree that there is not clear evidence of the death penalty acting as a deterrent in these cases. Agencies such as Amnesty International have spread educational measures regarding the reprehensible nature of the death penalty and the need for its abolition. Although methods of execution have changed, the belief in the death penalty as an effective deterrent has remained fairly constant domestically, especially in Texas and in the south where the death penalty tends to be used more often. Some sources, such as Sorell, in his rather over-philosophical estimation of the death penalty, which relies more on Kant and Miller than the present, do not take this reality into account at all in the text."
Tags:scriptural, spectacle, racial-discrimination, over-representation, international
Discusses global and domestic terrorism, the motivation of terrorists, and suggestions for deterring terrorism.
Term Paper # 45583 |
2,797 words (
approx. 11.2 pages ) |
6 sources |
APA | 2003
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$ 50.95
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Abstract
This paper shows that recent experience, from the attack of 9/11, the bombings of the embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, the World Trade Center, the federal building in Oklahoma City, and Khobar Towers to the use of chemical weapons in the Tokyo subway and Hamas suicide attacks in Israel, has galvanized public and expert attention, reminding us that terrorism is capable of starkly affecting U.S. citizens and U.S. interests. The paper shows that the increase in terrorist activities also suggests troubling new dimensions, including the potential for terrorists' use of weapons of mass destruction: nuclear, chemical, biological, and radiological.
From the Paper
"Two major forms of terrorism occur domestically and internationally: right-wing/separatist terrorism, and religiously motivated terrorism. It is worth noting that terrorism experts are increasingly uncomfortable with the traditional distinction between domestic and international terror in an age of global communications and networked terrorism. Many of the most serious terrorist risks to U.S. national security "above all, those of mass destruction and mass disruption in periods of crisis or conflict" can have a transnational dimension..."
Tags:Osama, Bin, Laden, ETA, Red, Army
The following paper is a proposal for a city-wide 501(c)(3) non-profit organization, run by former criminal offenders, that will endeavor to steer young people away from crime, drug use, and - not least of all - violence. In working towards this ...
Essay # 137359 |
2,000 words (
approx. 8 pages ) |
3 sources |
APA |
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$ 38.95
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Abstract
The following paper is a proposal for a city-wide 501(c)(3) non-profit organization, run by former criminal offenders, that will endeavor to steer young people away from crime, drug use, and - not least of all - violence. In working towards this important goal, the organization will join hands with the local university in an ambitious research program that will propose new methods for dealing with various types of crime while, at the same time, quantifying the impact and effectiveness of those methods using the latest evaluative tools. As well, the program I have in mind will train individuals both young and old how to live their lives constructively and in a manner consistent with the highest in civic values. In the final analysis, the program is a comprehensive outreach program that will work with young people on the street, in the community's schools, and will utilize peer mentoring, job counseling, remedial education, and (where needed) cognitive behavioral therapy to take back our streets from local gangs and others who seek to drag young people down the wrong path.
From the Paper
A Proposal for Creating a City-Wide 501(c)(3) Non-Profit Organization That Will Prevent, Deter and Decrease Crime, Drugs and Violence in an Urban Community The following paper is a proposal for a city-wide 501(c)(3) non-profit organization, run by former criminal offenders, that will endeavor to steer young people away from crime, drug use, and - not least of all - violence. In working towards this important goal, the organization will join hands with the local university in an ambitious research program that will propose new methods for dealing with various types of crime while, at the same time, quantifying the impact and effectiveness of those methods
Tags:crime, drugs, community
An argument that harsh prison sentences do not work.
Persuasive Essay # 127286 |
750 words (
approx. 3 pages ) |
0 sources |
APA | 2008
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$ 16.95
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This paper examines the question of whether harsher sentences reduce crime. The paper examines statistics that suggest that harsher sentences do not reduce crime, but relates that legislators continue to pass laws mandating tougher and longer sentences especially for drug related crimes including simple possession, and habitual criminal statutes can put non violent offenders away for decades. The paper contends that the answer to the question of whether harsh sentences work is a definite No!
From the Paper
"Should a first time offender be sentenced the same sentence as a career criminal? Should a kid selling a friend one marijuana cigarette be sentenced to the same mandatory minimum sentence under federal determinate sentencing guidelines for drug distribution as someone distributing pounds of heroin? Should discretion be taken away from judges during the sentencing phase of criminal trials? Is there any evidence that longer prison sentences reduce crime? In my opinion, the answer to each of these questions is no. The most..."
Tags:prison, judges defendants, prosecutors, life, habitual offender, plea bargain, recidivism