Program Handbook Criminal Justice, Criminology & Forensics Seattle University 901 12Th Avenue/P.O
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For further information contact: Administrative Staff Jonathan Bechtol, Administrative Assistant E-Mail: [email protected] Phone: (206)296-6339 Nicole Moses, Program Coordinator E-Mail: [email protected] Phone: (206)-296-2139 Program Handbook Criminal Justice, Criminology & Forensics Seattle University 901 12th Avenue/P.O. Box 222000 2021-22 Seattle, WA 98122-1090 OR Matthew J. Hickman PhD, Professor/Chair Criminal Justice, Criminology & Forensics Seattle University 901 12th Avenue/P.O. Box 222000 Seattle, WA 98122-1090 Phone: (206)296-2484 E-Mail: [email protected] Department Web Site: http://www.seattleu.edu/artsci/departments/criminal/ 28 Welcome to the Department of Criminal Justice, Criminology, and Forensics! Criminal Justice is a broad and fascinating field of study. Our department offers multiple degree/specialization options and a diverse selection of course offerings. Students choose the criminal justice major for a variety of reasons: • To obtain a solid foundation in criminal justice in preparation for employment in the criminal justice system • To obtain the necessary degree/coursework in preparation for graduate or law school • To obtain the necessary degree/coursework in preparation for specialized employment in forensic science (e.g., crime labs, medical examiners offices) • To obtain a Bachelors Degree consisting of interesting courses Criminal Justice graduates pursue many career routes. Criminal Justice is an academic discipline that enjoys a high job placement rate. Criminal Justice graduates obtain positions in law enforcement, private security, community and institutional corrections, court services, victim services, crime labs, social services, and investigation in a range of public and private agencies (e.g., as medicolegal death investigators in medical examiners offices, fraud investigators in insurance agencies or the U.S. Postal Inspection, etc). Students who go on to law school tend to seek positions as public defenders or prosecuting attorneys. Those who pursue a graduate degree in criminal justice, forensic psychology, or other fields generally seek careers in academia, as forensic psychologists, or as clinicians and/or consultants at different stages of the criminal justice process. We are proud to say that our past graduates include law enforcement officers, corrections officers, community corrections officers, offender transition counselors, public defenders, prosecuting attorneys, private security supervisors, forensic scientists and technicians, medicolegal death investigators, victim advocates, juvenile detention and probation officers, and others who are making important contributions to the field of criminal justice. In addition to an interesting, exciting curriculum geared toward specialized career goals, our department offers opportunities for internships, volunteer experience, and tours of local criminal justice agencies and facilities. Internship opportunities include: Washington State Department of Corrections, King County Department of Adult and Juvenile Detention, Family & Friends of Violent Crime Victims, Municipal Court of Seattle, Northwest High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area, Seattle Police Department, King County Sheriff, King County Medical Examiner’s Office, Washington State Patrol Crime Lab, U.S. Investigations, and Federal Agencies including the FBI, INS, U.S. Marshals, ATF, DEA, U.S. Probation, Federal Bureau of Prisons, and U.S. Postal Inspection. 2 27 CRJS 4650 Crime Scene & Medico-Legal Death Investigation 5 Program Objectives In-depth look into crime scene and medicolegal death investigation. The manners, mechanisms, causes of death, and post-mortem changes, and wound interpretation are explored. The students will learn how to apply postmortem conditions to criminal Criminal Justice is an interdisciplinary social science involving the study of crime investigations to confirm or refute evidence of wrongful deaths. The course will emphasize and societal responses to it. The objective of a criminal justice major is to crime scene search, recognition of physical evidence, techniques and methods for develop in students the knowledge, insight, critical thinking skills, values and collection, preservation and transmission for laboratory analysis of evidence, and the ethical consciousness essential to becoming responsible practitioners, courtroom presentation of investigators actions at the crime scene. A component of this managers, researchers, and leaders in criminal justice. The criminal justice course will involve development of/participation in a mock crime scene investigation. major is designed to provide students with conceptual and research knowledge Recommended Prerequisites: CRJS 3200, CRJS 4800. that will foster sophisticated thinking, reflection, and action regarding crime and CRJS 4770 Criminal Justice Honors Directed Reading 3 criminal justice. We hope to instill in students a responsibility to integrate and evaluate conceptual and empirical contributions to the field of criminal justice and CRJS 4780 Criminal Justice Honors Directed Study 3 to understand the relationship between criminal justice theory, policy, and CRJS 4790 Criminal Justice Honors Thesis Supervision 4 practice. The driving spirit of the criminal justice program is one that reflects the basic foundation of Jesuit education -- reflection and action. We seek to develop CRJS 4800 Forensic Science 5 a spirit of inquiry and innovation in students – encouraging them to ask "why Study of the application of science to law and the criminal justice system. Overview of disciplines, theories, techniques and practices of which the field of forensic science is not?" of things not tried and to reflect and think critically about crime and justice comprised. Fulfills Interdisciplinary Core Requirement. issues and the systems that deal with them in our complex society. CRJS 4810 Murder Movies & Copycat Crime 3/5 The criminal justice curriculum provides a foundation for understanding Examination of the relationship between crime, criminal justice, and popular culture with contemporary criminal justice theory and practice. The criminal justice major attention to the criminogenic and cathartic effects of film and media depictions of violent crime, specifically murder. Focus on the dynamics of moral panics and copycat crime, the offers scholarly emphasis and critical appraisal of law enforcement, the courts, reflexive relationship between media and crime, and the individual-social-cultural effects of and corrections and is designed to provide students with knowledge of the violent images and artifacts. components of criminal justice system and stages of criminal justice process. In recent years, the field of criminal justice has become increasingly CRJS 4850 Forensic Science Lab 3 interdisciplinary. Now, more than ever before, criminal justice graduates must be Application of scientific methods and techniques to problems n the field of forensic science interdisciplinary experts with a strong background in the social and physical and crime scene investigation. Hands-on introduction to techniques used in the forensic sciences. To meet the needs of a quickly evolving, increasingly demanding, and science laboratory. Lab exercises involving a range of forensic science methods, growing job market, our department offers multiple degree and specialization techniques, and specializations including: Evidence collection and handling, analysis of hair and fiber, trace evidence, toolmarks, blood stains and spatter patterns, gunshot options: The Bachelor of Arts (BA) with specialization in Administration of residue, and other physical evidence, fingerprinting and fingerprint enhancement, footwear Justice, Criminology & Criminal Justice Theory, Forensic Psychology, and comparisons, forensic serology, and toxicology, DNA analysis, firearms and questioned Forensic Science and the Bachelor of Science with specialization in Forensic document examination. Prerequisites: BIOL 1610/1611, CHEM 1500, PHYS 1050 or Psychology and Forensic Science. Internship and Research opportunities 1210, CRJS-CHEM 4800, BA and BS/Forensic Science majors only or permission of the supplement coursework by providing students with experience working and Department Chair. conducting research within criminal justice agencies. Graduates are prepared for CRJS 4870 Senior Synthesis 3 to 5 positions in law enforcement, the courts, victim services, institutional and community corrections, investigation and social service in private, county, state, CRJS 4910 Special Topics 1 to 5 and federal agencies and/or to pursue graduate study in criminal justice, criminology, forensic science, forensic psychology, or law. CRJS 4950 Internship 5 The core criminal justice curriculum required for all majors consists of Direct observation, supervised practical experience, and academic study in a selected law coursework in criminal justice, criminology, criminal law, statistics, research enforcement agency or organization in the criminal justice system. CR/F grading methods, organizational theory, and criminal justice ethics. Degree and mandatory. Prerequisite: junior and senior standing and departmental permission. specialization options allow students to take additional coursework in specialized CRJS 4960 Independent Study 1 to 5 areas to meet diverse student interests and to prepare students for positions in the criminal justice field that require specialized coursework and knowledge. CRJS 4970 Directed Reading 1 to 5 CRJS 4990 Directed Research 1 to 5 26