Introduction to the Criminal Justice System
Curriculum guideline
The course will employ a variety of instructional methods to accomplish its objectives, including some of the following: lectures, and may include field trips, guest speakers, audio-visual presentations, debates, and individual readings by students.
- The systems approach to the study of the Canadian Criminal Justice System.
- Sources of law and the role of government
- Criminal law and criminal justice in Canada
- Crime control philosophy and criminal justice policy
- Crime rates, crime trends, and perceptions of crime
- The Criminal Code of Canada and related Statutes
- The various parts of the Canadian Criminal Justice System and the impact these parts have on the cases passing through the system.
- services for victims
- the police
- policing roles, styles, and functions
- police powers and legal protection
- the courts
- court role and structure
- major actors in the Canadian system
- sentencing
- corrections
- probation and community corrections
- jails and penitentiaries
- conditional release
- parole (federal and provincial)
- Current issues and challenges for reform such as:
- criminal justice for youth
- mental health
- Indigenous justice
- restorative justice
- diversity
- fear of crime
- community-based policing
- sentencing
- community court
- crime prevention
- Future Directions
At the conclusion of the course the successful student will be able to:
- Analyze criminal justice from a systems perspective
- Identify sources of criminal law and explain its relevance to criminal justice in Canada
- Describe crime control philosophy and its influence on criminal justice policy
- Analyze and interpret crime and victimization patterns and trends
- Explain the role of the public and media in criminal justice
- Describe the progression of an offender through the subcomponents of the Canadian criminal justice system
- Describe the structure and function of the following components of criminal justice:
- the police
- the courts
- corrections
- Identify current criminal justice issues and challenges for reform.
Evaluation will be based on course objectives and will be carried out in accordance with Douglas College policy. The course will include multiple methods of evaluation including at least one written component. The instructor will provide a written course outline with specific criteria during the first week of classes.
An example of a possible evaluation scheme would be:
Attendance and participation tasks | 10% |
Group presentation (with written outline) | 10% |
Annotated biolography | 15% |
Term paper (e.g. argumentative essay, policy development, case analysis, journal, blogs, reflective essay) | 20% |
Midterm (contains writing component such as short or long essay, critique, case analysis) | 20% |
Final (contains writing component such as short or long essay, critique, case analysis) | 25% |
Total | 100% |
Texts will be updated periodically. Typical examples are:
- Curt T. Griffiths, 2015. Canadian Criminal Justice: A Primer, 5th Ed. Scarborough: Thomson Nelson.
- Goff, Colin, 2016. Criminal Justice in Canada , 7th Edition. Scarborough: Thomson Nelson.
- Roberts, Julian and Grossman, Michelle, 2016. Criminal Justice in Canada: A Reader, 5th Ed. Scarborough: Thomson Nelson.
2140, 3340, 3355, 3376, 3380,4410, 4490