Considering our course exploration of Corrections, answer the following questions and provide an analysis:
- In general, what is the criminal justice system’s current approach to sentencing?
- Do you believe our current approach to sentencing and corrections is successful? Why or why not? (Be sure to find outside research to support your position!)
- Do you believe we need a new paradigm for sentencing and corrections? Why or why not?
- What specific alternative(s) exist relative to our current approach to sentencing and corrections?
Your ppr should be 4-5 pges.This requires outside sources in addition to our text, as well as Scripture, all of which should be documented in APA format.
Guideline — step-by-step to write the 4–5 page paper
Purpose: Answer the questions below with evidence and analysis, include at least several outside scholarly sources plus Scripture, all in APA format.
Questions to address (explicitly in your paper):
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In general, what is the criminal justice system’s current approach to sentencing?
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Is the current approach successful? Why or why not? (support position with outside research)
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Do we need a new paradigm for sentencing and corrections? Why or why not?
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What specific alternatives exist relative to the current approach?
Recommended paper structure (4–5 pages ≈ 1200–1500 words)
Title page (APA) — not counted in page total.
Introduction (≈ 1 paragraph — 100–150 words)
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Briefly introduce the topic and stakes (mass incarceration, public safety, cost, recidivism).
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Present a concise thesis statement that answers whether the current approach succeeds and whether change is needed.
Background / Current Approach to Sentencing (≈ 1 page — 300–350 words)
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Describe dominant features of current U.S. sentencing: determinate vs. indeterminate, mandatory minimums, three-strikes, emphasis on incarceration and punishment, sentencing guidelines, parole reductions.
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Present brief stats/landscape: incarceration rates, growth since 1970s/1980s, fiscal costs.
Evaluation: Is the current approach successful? (≈ 1 page — 300–350 words)
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Define “successful” (public safety, reduced recidivism, fairness, cost-efficiency, rehabilitation).
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Summarize research findings: recidivism trends, deterrence evidence (or lack), racial disparities, collateral consequences.
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Use at least two peer-reviewed/credible sources to support your argument.
Need for a new paradigm? (≈ ½ page — 150–200 words)
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Argue for/against paradigm change based on the evaluation.
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If yes: outline the goals a new paradigm must meet (reduce recidivism, equity, rehabilitation, cost-effectiveness).
Specific Alternatives (≈ 1 page — 300–350 words)
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Describe alternatives and evidence supporting them:
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Restorative justice (victim–offender mediation, community reparative boards).
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Diversion programs / drug courts / mental-health courts.
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Community-based supervision and reentry programs (housing, employment supports, cognitive-behavioral therapy).
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Evidence-based sentencing (risk-needs-responsivity, graduated sanctions).
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Sentencing reforms (rolling back mandatory minimums, alternatives to incarceration for nonviolent offenses).
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For each, briefly state evidence of effectiveness (studies showing reduced recidivism or cost savings).
Integration of Scripture & Moral/Theological Reflection (≈ ½ page — 150–200 words)
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Select 1–3 scriptural passages that inform justice, mercy, restoration, and civic order. Briefly reflect on how these passages shape your view of punishment vs. rehabilitation. (See suggested Scriptures below.)
Conclusion (≈ 1 paragraph — 100–150 words)
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Summarize your position and policy recommendations.
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Reiterate why the recommended alternatives better meet public safety, fairness, and moral obligations.
Reference list (APA) — not counted in page total.
Sources & research suggestions (use at least 3–4 outside sources)
Scholarly / policy sources (recommended):
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National Research Council. (2014). The Growth of Incarceration in the United States: Exploring Causes and Consequences. (Comprehensive review; useful for background).
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The Sentencing Project. (Recent reports on mass incarceration, racial disparities).
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Cullen, F. T., & Jonson, C. L. (2017). Correctional Theory: Context and Consequences or other peer-reviewed articles on rehabilitation.
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Nagin, D. S. (2013). Deterrence in the Twenty-First Century (Annual Review of Economics/Criminology) — for deterrence evidence.
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Evidence on alternatives: meta-analyses on drug courts, restorative justice (e.g., Sherman & Strang, 2007).
Practical/credible sources:
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Pew Charitable Trusts (criminal justice research)
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U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics (incarceration/recidivism data)
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RAND Corporation (evaluations of programs)
(When you use these, cite in-text per APA and include full references.)
Scripture options (choose 1–3 to reference)
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Romans 13:1–4 — role of governing authorities and punishment.
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Micah 6:8 — “act justly, love mercy, walk humbly” — useful for balancing justice and mercy.
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Matthew 25:36 — care for prisoners (compassion/responsibility).
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Luke 4:18 — ministry to the oppressed, rehabilitation theme.
Use Scripture to provide ethical reflection — avoid making the paper solely theological; integrate religious insight with empirical research.
Key points & evidence to include (examples)
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Costs: incarceration is expensive; alternatives often cheaper and can reduce recidivism. Cite cost-benefit studies.
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Effectiveness: evidence shows incarceration has limited deterrent effect for many crimes and high rates of recidivism for those released without supports. Cite meta-analyses.
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Equity: racial and socio-economic disparities in sentencing are documented; reforms should address disparities. Cite The Sentencing Project.
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Alternatives evidence: drug courts and some restorative programs reduce recidivism and incarceration days; cite evaluations.
Writing mechanics & APA reminders
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Length: 4–5 double-spaced pages of content (≈ 1200–1500 words), Times New Roman 12 pt, 1-inch margins. Title page and references separate.
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In-text citations: (Author, Year) per APA 7th.
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References: full APA entries for all sources, including Scripture (church version cited in text and reference list if required by your instructor — APA suggests citing the Bible in-text and listing version in first citation). Example for Bible: (New International Version, 2011, Romans 13:1–4) and in-text: (NIV, Rom. 13:1–4). Check your instructor’s preference.
Thesis examples you can adapt
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“While incarceration has been the dominant response for the last forty years, evidence suggests it has not achieved intended public safety goals; a shift toward evidence-based alternatives—restorative justice, problem-solving courts, and robust reentry services—would better balance public safety, fiscal responsibility, and moral obligations toward rehabilitation.”
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Or a conditional-thesis: “The current sentencing paradigm requires targeted reform—not wholesale abandonment—using a hybrid model that reserves incarceration for high-risk violent offenders while expanding community-based alternatives for nonviolent offenses.”
Quick checklist before submission
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4–5 pages of body text (not including title and references).
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At least 3–4 outside scholarly/credible sources cited.
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Include Scripture passage(s) and short theological reflection.
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APA title page and references formatted correctly.
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Proofread for grammar, clarity, and cohesion.
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Make sure empirical claims are supported by citations.
Sample APA citations to get you started
National Research Council. (2014). The growth of incarceration in the United States: Exploring causes and consequences. The National Academies Press. https://doi.org/10.17226/18613
The Sentencing Project. (2020). Report Title. https://www.sentencingproject.org
Sherman, L. W., & Strang, H. (2007). Restorative justice: The evidence. The Smith Institute. (Find a peer-reviewed meta-analysis if required.)
(Replace with the exact articles you use; these are placeholders to help you start.)
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