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CHAPTER 2
• It is the science and art of investigating and comparing the police system of nations. It
covers the study of police organizations, trainings and methods of policing of various
nations.
• Comparative Police System
• It is a term that has been used in comparative and international criminal justice study in
recent years to reflect the complexity and enormity of global crime issues.
• Transnational Crime
• A researcher visits another country.
• "Safari" Method
• It is basically an alternative to both quantitative and qualitative research methods that is
sometimes called historiography or holism.
• Historical-comprehensive Method
• It is that along with higher standards of living, victims become more careless of their
belongings, and opportunities for committing crime multiply.
• Opportunity Theory
• The latter being a term referring to social cohesion on values, suggests that progressive
lifestyle and norms result in the disintegration of older norms that once held people
together.
• Theory of Anomie and Synomie
• It refers to a system where police administrations and operations are independent from
one state to another.
• Decentralized Law Enforcement
• A country with only one recognized police force which operates entire that country.
• Centralized Policing System
• The accused is innocent until proven guilty, and inquisitorial, where the accused is guilty
until proven innocent or mitigated.
• Adversarial System
• Where lesser rights are granted to the accused, and the written law is taken as gospel
and subject to little interpretation.
• Inquisitorial Systems
CHAPTER 3
black notice
interpol
blue notice
purple notice
It refers to the reduction and removal of barriers between national borders in order to
facilitate to flow of goods, capital, services and labor.*
economic context OR GLOBALIZATION
To seek the arrest or provisional arrest of wanted persons with a view to extradition.
red notice
yellow notice
To provide warnings and intelligence about persons who have committed criminal
offences and are likely to repeat these crimes in other countries.
green notice
general assembly
purple notice
human trafficking
cyberstalking
A type of notice to seek the arrest or provisional arrest of wanted persons with a view to
extradition.
red notice
It involves selling drugs and drug paraphernalia, whether is it a local exchange between
a user and a dealer or a major international operation.
drug trafficking
It always seeks to obtain a financial or another material benefit, whereas power and
control can be secondary motives.
organized crime
Underground criminal societies based in Hong Kong. They control secret markets and
bus routes and are often involved in money laundering and drug trafficking.
triads
It is malicious software that interferes with the functioning of computers and sending
data of users over the internet.
malware
computer fraud
It is the process of creating the appearance that large amounts of money obtained from
serious crimes, such as drug trafficking, originated from a legitimate source.
money laundering
They have been involved in racketeering, fraud, tax evasion, gambling, drug trafficking,
ransom, robbery and murder.*
russian mafia
yakuza
1923
Organized crime group in Thailand. They are often involved in illegal political and
business activity.
jao pho
It records any information about something that was in a criminal case, ex: information
on criminals, type of crime, vehicles, anything to help any police officer with information
about a certain crime.
interpol
Known as the Italian or Italian-American mafia. The most prominent organized crime
group in the world from the 1920’s to the 1990’s.
la cosa nostra
It refers to the reduction and removal of barriers between national borders in order to
facilitate to flow of goods, capital, services, and labor. although considerable barriers
remain to the flow of labor.
globalization
Chinese organized group in the United States. They have been involved in smuggling,
street violence, and human trafficking.
fukching
A type of notice to provide warnings and intelligence about persons who have committed
criminal offenses and are likely to repeat these crimes in other countries.
green notice
Taiwanese gangsters who are often executives in large corporations. They are often
involved in white-collar crimes, such as illegal stock trading and bribery, and sometimes
run for public office.
Heijin
blue notice
yellow notice
identity theft
It is a term that has been used in comparative and international criminal justice studies
in recent years to reflect the complexity and enormity of global crime issues.
transnational crime
It has little codification law, no specification among police, and a system of punishment
that just lets things go for a while without attention until things become too much, and
then harsh, barbaric punishment is resorted to.
folk-communal societies
It is a country with only one recognized police force that operates entirely in that country.
It involves the study and description of one country’s law, criminal procedure, or justice
(Erika Fairchild).
.The examination of crime and its control in the comparative context often requires an
historical perspective since the phenomena under study are seen as having developed
under unique social, economic, and political structures
published works
historical-comprehensive method
It is the theory of police service that maintains that police officers are servants of higher
authorities.
continental
migration theory
Police become specialized in how to handle property crimes, and the system of
punishment is run on market principles of creating incentives and disincentives.
urban-industrial societies
It refers to a system where police administrations and operations are independent of one
state to another.
decentralized police
A system of policing emerged during the Anglo-Saxon period whereby all male residents
were required to guard the town to preserve peace and protect the lives and properties
of the people.
This theory of police service states that police officers are servants of the community or
the people.
home rule
socialist system
It is that along with higher standards of living, victims become more careless of their
belongings, and opportunities for committing crime multiply.
opportunity theory
It states that the yardstick of police proficiency relies on the absence of crime.
It is stated that the yardstick of police proficiency relies on the number of arrests made.
old police service
Where lesser rights are granted to the accused, and the written law is taken as gospel
and subject to little interpretation.
inquisitorial systems
trial by ordeal
They report more crime to the police and also demand the police become more effective
at solving crime problems.
It is the science and art of investigating and comparing the police system of nations.*
safari method
It is some standards and customs are written down), specialized police forces (some for
religious offenses, others for enforcing the King’s Law), and punishment is inconsistent,
sometimes harsh, sometimes lenient.
urban-commercial societies