Details
Using Organizational Theory to Study, Explain, and Understand Criminal Legal Organizations
CHF 177.00 |
|
Verlag: | Springer |
Format: | |
Veröffentl.: | 20.09.2024 |
ISBN/EAN: | 9783031662850 |
Sprache: | englisch |
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Beschreibungen
<p>This book explicitly and intentionally uses organizational theory concepts and ideas to examine key issues in the criminal legal realm. Addressing some of the many organizational theories, this volume examines a variety of approaches and theoretical frameworks to explore and explain challenges that are both presented to and faced by the criminal legal system and the individuals served by or working within it.</p>
<p>This volume is divided into two parts: organizational theories and organizational concepts and ideas. Within these parts, individual chapters provide readers with new lenses or frameworks for considering criminal legal organization, including one that involves organizational theoretical explanations for how and why criminal legal organizations and their staff and workers operate in these critically salient spaces.</p>
<p>The book concludes with a chapter that outlines important considerations for anyone seeking to learn or teach organizational theory as a way of explaining or understanding criminal legal organizations. Additional reading suggestions and two sample syllabi are provided.</p>
<p>The book is ideal for criminal justice and criminology undergraduate and graduate students, but is also relevant to individuals considering criminal legal organizations in courses in sociology, law and society, and organizational behavior.</p>
<p>This volume is divided into two parts: organizational theories and organizational concepts and ideas. Within these parts, individual chapters provide readers with new lenses or frameworks for considering criminal legal organization, including one that involves organizational theoretical explanations for how and why criminal legal organizations and their staff and workers operate in these critically salient spaces.</p>
<p>The book concludes with a chapter that outlines important considerations for anyone seeking to learn or teach organizational theory as a way of explaining or understanding criminal legal organizations. Additional reading suggestions and two sample syllabi are provided.</p>
<p>The book is ideal for criminal justice and criminology undergraduate and graduate students, but is also relevant to individuals considering criminal legal organizations in courses in sociology, law and society, and organizational behavior.</p>
<p><strong>Part I</strong>- SELECT ORGANIZATIONAL THEORIES. .- Chapter 1. A NEO-INSTITUTIONAL ACCOUNT OF PRISONIZATION.- Chapter 2. “OUT OF BOUNDS”: THE INFLUENCE OF PERSONAL AND INSTITUTIONALIZED BOUNDED RATIONALITY ON JUDICIAL DECISION MAKING.- Chapter 3. A SYSTEMS APPROACH TO CRIMINAL JUSTICE POLICYMAKING.- Chapter 4. APPLICATION OF CONTINGENCY THEORY TO THE “WORKFORCE CRISIS” IN POLICING.- Chapter 5. AN ORGANIZATIONAL PROCESS APPROACH FOR IDENTIFYING SIDE EFFECTS OF JUVENILE JUSTICE SYSTEM REFORMS.- Chapter 6. AN APPLICATION OF STRUCTURATION THEORY TO CRIMINAL ORGANIZATIONS.- <strong>Part II</strong>- SELECT ORGANIZATIONAL CONCEPTS & IDEAS.- Chapter 7. SEXUAL HARASSMENT IN POLICE ORGANIZATIONS: APPLYING THE LENS OF ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE AND CLIMATE.- Chapter 8. TOWARD AN ORGANIZATIONAL CLIMATE OF DELINQUENCY PREVENTION: THE MISSING LINK FOR UNDERSTANDING SCHOOL DELINQUENCY.- Chapter 9. ADMINISTRATIVE BURDENS IN CORRECTIONAL PROGRAMMING.- Chapter 10. POWER, DISCRETION, AND THE LANDSCAPE OF CONTEMPORARY PROSECUTION.- Chapter 11. ENDURING HARM AS A BY-PRODUCT OF PROSECUTORS’ POWER OVER EXONEREES POST-INCARCERATION.- Chapter 12. MISCONDUCT ROUTINIZATION IN CRIMINAL LEGAL ORGANIZATIONS: AN EXPLOSIVE CLUSTER OF FEEDBACK LOOPS.- Chapter 13. BOYCOTTING THE UNIFORM CRIME REPORT: ORGANIZATIONAL THEORY ANALYSIS OF THE CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF COOPERATIVE FAILURES BY POLICE FOR FEDERAL CRIME REPORTING.- Chapter 14. BEYOND JUST A FEW ‘BAD APPLES:’ ORGANIZATIONAL UNDERSTANDINGS OF POLICE MISCONDUCT AS DEVIANT SUBCULTURES.- Chapter 15. LEADERSHIP IN LAW ENFORCEMENT.- Chapter 16. CONCLUSION & FUTURE DIRECTIONS.</p>
<p><strong>Danielle S. Rudes </strong>is a Professor in the Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology at Sam Houston State University.<strong> </strong>She is an organizational sociologist/criminologist who uses qualitative methods to explore key questions related to the implementation of organizational change. She first became interested in how organizations worked before graduate school while working in a large restaurant/night-club where the culture was created, institutionalized, and socialized daily. From there, she turned her attention to correctional environments but her interest in both formal and informal organizational processes and perceptions continues today. Her substantive expertise is in institutional and community corrections. Her research considers organizational dynamics among a wide array of people, including prison/jail staff and residents, probation/parole officers and individuals under supervision, and problem-solving court teams and clients. Her work uses several organizational theories and concepts including street-level bureaucracy theory, discretionary decision making, sensemaking, institutional logics, and implementation science. She has taught both undergraduate and graduate-level courses in corrections, reentry, and organizational theory for nearly 20 years.</p>
<p><strong>Jason R. Ingram </strong>is a Professor in the Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology at Sam Houston State University. He first became interested in organizational theory as a Criminal Justice PhD student at Michigan State University. Here, he developed a cognate area in Industrial and Organizational Psychology that had a significant influence on his approach to research in criminal legal organizations, especially as it relates to police culture. His primary area of research focuses on how police officers’ immediate work environments shape and constrain their cultural views using multilevel theory and methods. Subsequent studies have applied this framework to understand outcomes such as culture strength, officer street-level behaviors, job satisfaction, and supervisory influences. He has also taught graduate-level courses in policing and in organizational theory that incorporate many of the theoretical frameworks and concepts in this book to help students better understand criminal legal organizations.</p>
<p><strong>Jason R. Ingram </strong>is a Professor in the Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology at Sam Houston State University. He first became interested in organizational theory as a Criminal Justice PhD student at Michigan State University. Here, he developed a cognate area in Industrial and Organizational Psychology that had a significant influence on his approach to research in criminal legal organizations, especially as it relates to police culture. His primary area of research focuses on how police officers’ immediate work environments shape and constrain their cultural views using multilevel theory and methods. Subsequent studies have applied this framework to understand outcomes such as culture strength, officer street-level behaviors, job satisfaction, and supervisory influences. He has also taught graduate-level courses in policing and in organizational theory that incorporate many of the theoretical frameworks and concepts in this book to help students better understand criminal legal organizations.</p>
<p>This book explicitly and intentionally uses organizational theory concepts and ideas to examine key issues in the criminal legal realm. Addressing some of the many organizational theories, this volume examines a variety of approaches and theoretical frameworks to explore and explain challenges that are both presented to and faced by the criminal legal system and the individuals served by or working within it.</p>
<p>This volume is divided into two parts: organizational theories and organizational concepts and ideas. Within these parts, individual chapters provide readers with new lenses or frameworks for considering criminal legal organization, including one that involves organizational theoretical explanations for how and why criminal legal organizations and their staff and workers operate in these critically salient spaces.</p>
<p>The book concludes with a chapter that outlines important considerations for anyone seeking to learn or teach organizational theory as a way of explaining or understanding criminal legal organizations. Additional reading suggestions and two sample syllabi are provided.</p>
<p>The book is ideal for criminal justice and criminology undergraduate and graduate students, but is also relevant to individuals considering criminal legal organizations in courses in sociology, law and society, and organizational behavior.</p>
<p>This volume is divided into two parts: organizational theories and organizational concepts and ideas. Within these parts, individual chapters provide readers with new lenses or frameworks for considering criminal legal organization, including one that involves organizational theoretical explanations for how and why criminal legal organizations and their staff and workers operate in these critically salient spaces.</p>
<p>The book concludes with a chapter that outlines important considerations for anyone seeking to learn or teach organizational theory as a way of explaining or understanding criminal legal organizations. Additional reading suggestions and two sample syllabi are provided.</p>
<p>The book is ideal for criminal justice and criminology undergraduate and graduate students, but is also relevant to individuals considering criminal legal organizations in courses in sociology, law and society, and organizational behavior.</p>
Covers key organizational theories relevant to researching, studying, or understanding criminal legal organizations First edited volume that specifically uses organizational theory to frame key issues in criminal legal organizations Provides new theoretical framing for established areas of research in criminal justice and criminology