18 results on '"Ray Surette"'
Search Results
2. Performance Crime and Justice
- Author
-
Ray Surette
- Subjects
021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,business.industry ,Project commissioning ,05 social sciences ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Distribution (economics) ,ComputingMilieux_LEGALASPECTSOFCOMPUTING ,02 engineering and technology ,Content creation ,Public relations ,Criminology ,Economic Justice ,New media ,Publishing ,Cultural criminology ,050501 criminology ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDSOCIETY ,Social media ,Sociology ,business ,Law ,0505 law - Abstract
Due to enhanced audience participation and involvement in content creation and distribution, crime and justice has changed. This change came about with the emergence of new digital social media and...
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Thought bite: A case study of the social construction of a crime and justice concept
- Author
-
Ray Surette
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Communication ,Cultural criminology ,Copycat ,Sociology ,Criminology ,Construct (philosophy) ,Social constructionism ,Law ,Economic Justice - Abstract
The social construction of copycat crime exhibits a process in which a new criminological meme developed first as a media construct and subsequently as a criminological concept. How common the sequence where criminologists follow the media in the construction of crime and justice reality is unknown. The examination of the social construction of copycat crime suggested that the media create a new crime and justice construct through increased usage and modification of either newly minted or previously existing phrases that are disseminated as new crime and justice memes. In the case of copycat crime, media usage and public acceptance foreshadowed criminologists’ use of the phrase. A multi-step social construction process is hypothesized. A new construct becomes established and accepted in the public lexicon and popular media content; criminology researchers and practitioners note the increased public interest; renamed and reinvigorated research follows, and successful constructs become validated crime and justice phenomena. Employing the social construction history of copycat crime as a case study, this article details the social construction activities in the public and media spheres that created receptive environments for a unique new criminological construct to be developed. Traced from the inception of its component parts to its birth and adoption, the social construction of “copycat crime” demonstrates a useful methodology for the study of other crime and justice constructions and suggests that the relationship between criminology and the media regarding the social construction of crime and justice be further explored.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Preventive and punitive criminal justice policy support in Trinidad: The media’s role
- Author
-
Linda S. Heath, Jason Young, Derek Chadee, and Ray Surette
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Communication ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Punitive damages ,Poison control ,Criminology ,Economic Justice ,Democracy ,Media consumption ,Theory of criminal justice ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Crime prevention ,Political science ,Law ,media_common ,Criminal justice - Abstract
An unresolved research question regarding crime and justice policy is the relationship between an individual’s media consumption and their support for punitive and preventive criminal justice policies. The relationship between media, crime, and justice is under-examined in countries other than the United States and Britain and the relationship between media and criminal justice policy support remains less than fully understood in all locales. In response, an examination of a media— policy relationship in a Western democracy not previously studied was conducted. Based on data from an October 2005 national telephone survey of Trinidad and Tobago residents, this study measured support for punitive and preventive criminal justice policies in association with crime and justice media consumption and worldviews. Multivariate analysis showed that, for Trinidadians, support for punitive policies was significantly related to perceiving television crime dramas as realistic and crime news as accurate. For preventive policy support, the same media factors plus the level of exposure to crime dramas on television were significant. Overall, media were found to play similar but not especially strong roles in support levels for both punitive and preventive criminal justice policies.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Recurrent issues in efforts to prevent homicidal youth violence in schools: Expert opinions
- Author
-
Karen E. Dill, Dewey G. Cornell, Ray Surette, Richard E. Redding, and Peter K. Smith
- Subjects
Safety Management ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Poison control ,Violence ,Criminology ,Risk Assessment ,Recurrence ,Risk Factors ,Homicide ,Humans ,Sanctions ,Interpersonal Relations ,Program Development ,Students ,Expert Testimony ,News media ,Social influence ,media_common ,Schools ,Bullying ,General Medicine ,Prosocial behavior ,Adolescent Behavior ,Copycat ,Public Health ,Safety ,Psychology ,Publicity ,Program Evaluation - Abstract
Developmental research on social influences on adolescents can guide practices aimed to prevent homicidal youth violence. School shootings have repeatedly raised questions about the contributory role of bullying and entertainment violence, how news media publicity might produce copycat crimes, and whether stiffer criminal sanctions might have a deterrent effect. This article presents the thoughts and recommendations of a group of experts on these topics summarizing the current knowledge base. In brief, bullying reduction programs may be a useful early prevention effort. Television and video games with violent themes can encourage aggressive behavior, but these media can be used to teach more prosocial behavior as well. The potential copycat effects of highly publicized crimes might be diminished with more restrained reporting, although more research is needed. Finally, there is substantial evidence that increased criminal sanctions for youthful offenders have not had a deterrent effect.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Measuring media oriented terrorism
- Author
-
Ray Surette, Kelly Hansen, and Greg Noble
- Subjects
Ninth ,Engineering ,Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,business.industry ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Poison control ,social sciences ,Computer security ,computer.software_genre ,Empirical research ,Orientation (mental) ,Terrorism ,Injury prevention ,News values ,business ,Law ,Social psychology ,computer ,Applied Psychology - Abstract
Although long established, media oriented terrorist events have not been conceptualized or measured in a coherent manner. To forward the empirical study of media oriented terrorism, a measure that can be applied to terrorist events or to terrorist groups was developed and employed to compare terrorist activity for twenty terrorist groups and two hundred terrorist events. The media orientation measure taps into five factors of media orientation and successfully differentiates high from low media orientated events and active and inactive media oriented terrorist groups. The single most important factor regarding any group's individual media orientation level was their base of operation. Terrorist groups that were engaged in regional struggles were found to be less media oriented. Despite the news value of death and injury, the terrorist group with the highest fatality and injury averages ranked ninth in its media orientation score indicating that death and injury was not a necessary indicator of media orientation. Scores further suggest that media savvy well-known terrorist groups did not pursue media oriented activity as a constant strategy.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. SOCIAL WORKER PERCEPTIONS OF THE PORTRAYAL OF THE PROFESSION IN THE NEWS AND ENTERTAINMENT MEDIA: AN EXPLORATORY STUDY
- Author
-
Ray Surette, Charles W. Otto, Monica Mendez, and Carole B. Zugazaga
- Subjects
Social work ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Exploratory research ,Media studies ,Public relations ,Public opinion ,Education ,Entertainment ,Social position ,Semantic differential ,business ,Psychology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,News media ,Reputation ,media_common - Abstract
This exploratory study describes social workers' perceptions of the depiction of the social work profession found in the news and entertainment media. A random sample of 665 MSW social workers who were members of the Florida Chapter of the National Association of Social Workers were surveyed regarding how they felt the profession was depicted in the news and entertainment media on a set of paired adjectives comprising 9 semantic differential scales. Findings showed that these social workers perceived the profession to be depicted negatively in both news and entertainment media. Implications for social work educators are discussed.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. CCTV and Citizen Guardianship Suppression: A Questionable Proposition
- Author
-
Ray Surette
- Subjects
Service (business) ,Engineering ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Internet privacy ,050401 social sciences methods ,Advertising ,Proposition ,Public space ,0504 sociology ,Legal guardian ,050501 criminology ,Surveillance camera ,business ,Empirical evidence ,Law ,Control zone ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,0505 law - Abstract
An untested hypothesis regarding closed-circuit television (CCTV) is that the use of CCTV surveillance systems causes the loss of informal citizen guardianship activities in camera-surveilled public spaces. This hypothesized effect is empirically tested in two ways. In the first approach, an examination of survey responses between respondents who were aware, without prompting, of a public space surveillance camera system (24.4% of the respondents) and those who were not aware of the cameras is undertaken. The expectation is that preexisting knowledge of the cameras will be associated with attitudes associated with a self-reported reduced willingness to exercise guardianship actions. In the second approach, time series data sets of calls for service in a CCTV-surveilled area and a comparison control zone are examined. Neither method revealed empirical evidence of a degrading of informal citizen guardianship activities following the installation of CCTV cameras.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Self-destructing prophecies: Long-term forecasting of municipal correctional bed need
- Author
-
Patrick Jablonski, Ray Surette, Bernard J. McCarthy, and Brandon K. Applegate
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,Actuarial science ,Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,Operations research ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,Jail inmate ,Prison ,Crowding ,Term (time) ,Politics ,Autoregressive integrated moving average ,education ,Psychology ,Law ,Applied Psychology ,Criminal justice ,media_common - Abstract
Although municipal jails consume a significant amount of resources and the number of inmates housed in such facilities exploded in the 1990s, the literature on forecasting jail populations is sparse. Jail administrators have available discussions on jail crowding and its causes, but do not have ready access to applications of forecasting techniques or practical demonstrations of a jail inmate population forecast. This article argues that the underlying reason for this deficiency is the inherent unpredictability of local long-term correctional population levels. The driving forces behind correctional bed need render local jail population forecasts empirically valid only for a brief time frame. These inherent difficulties include the volatile nature of jail populations and their greater sensitivity when compared with prison populations to local conditions; the gap between the data needed for local correctional population forecasting and what is realistically available to forecasters; the lack of reliable lead variables for longterm local correctional population forecasts; the clash of the mathematics of forecasting and the substantive issues involved in the interpretation of forecast models; and the significant political and policy impacts of forecasts on local criminal justice systems and subsequent correctional population trends. The differences between the accuracy of short-term versus long-term jail bed need forecasts means that forecasting local correctional bed need is empirically valid for, at best, one to two years. As the temporal cast is extended, longer-term forecasts quickly become error prone. Except for unique situations where jails exist in highly stable local political, social, and criminal justice environments, long-term forecasts of two years or greater are fatally flawed and have little empirical accuracy. Long-term forecasts of local jail bed needs are useful, though, as policy catalysts to encourage policymakers to consider possible long-term impacts of current decisions, but forecasts should be thought of and presented as one possible future scenario rather than a likely reality. Utilizing a demonstration of a local jail forecast based upon two common empirical forecasting approaches, ARIMA and autoregression, this article presents a case study of the inherent difficulties in the long-term forecasting of local jail bed need. D 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Roles and Responsibilities: Analyzing Local Leaders’Views on Jail Crowding From a Systems Perspective
- Author
-
Charles W. Otto, Ray Surette, Bernard J. McCarthy, Brandon K. Applegate, and Robin King Davis
- Subjects
050901 criminology ,05 social sciences ,Perspective (graphical) ,Context (language use) ,Criminology ,Metropolitan area ,Crowding ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Personal space ,Political science ,Agency (sociology) ,Juvenile delinquency ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,0509 other social sciences ,Law ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Criminal justice - Abstract
Jail crowding is a substantial concern for many local jurisdictions. Although several authors have suggested a system-wide approach to reduce crowding, relatively little is known about how top local criminal justice officials viewthis issue. Using interviews and surveys of criminal justice leaders in a large southern metropolitan county, this study examined perspectives on jail crowding and perceived interagency relationships. Consistent with prior studies, the respondents agreed that jail crowding is a problem and that the consequences of crowding extend beyond the correctional facility. Greater discord was observed on issues of agency responsibility for changing policies to effect reductions in crowding. Findings are interpreted within the context of a “loose coupling” framework of criminal justice organizations.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The Multifunction Jail: Policy Makers' Views of the Goals of Local Incarceration
- Author
-
Robin King Davis, Brandon K. Applegate, Charles W. Otto, Ray Surette, and Bernard J. McCarthy
- Subjects
Retributive justice ,050901 criminology ,05 social sciences ,Substance Abuse Problems ,Criminology ,Public administration ,Mental health ,Political science ,Deterrence (psychology) ,Criminal justice policy ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,0509 other social sciences ,Law ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Criminal justice - Abstract
As scholars of local corrections have noted, jails hold a myriad of inmates for widely diverse reasons. What remains unclear, however, is what purpose or purposes jails are expected to serve. Despite considerable research on the degree of support for various correctional goals, little is known about what goals people want local jails to pursue. Using a survey of local criminal justice leaders in Orange County, Florida, this study examines the preferences policy makers hold regarding the appropriate functions of jails. Our results suggest that these policy makers supported several utilitarian goals but were most supportive of rehabilitation and serving the needs of those with mental health and substance abuse problems. Lesser support was expressed for incapacitation, deterrence, retribution, and detention. The implications of these findings for criminal justice policy and for future research are discussed.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Self-Reported Copycat Crime Among a Population of Serious and Violent Juvenile Offenders
- Author
-
Ray Surette
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Population ,Exploratory research ,Poison control ,Human factors and ergonomics ,050109 social psychology ,Criminology ,050105 experimental psychology ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Copycat ,Juvenile delinquency ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Peer pressure ,education ,Psychology ,business ,Law ,Social psychology ,Mass media - Abstract
A unique population of juveniles, serious and violent juvenile offenders (SVJOs), has emergedas a public concern. A corollary concern is the effect of the mass media on juveniles. Addressing both issues, an exploratory study of copycat crime and the media's role in copycat crime's generation among a sample of SVJOs is conducted. The study's goals are to measure the prevalence of self-reportedcopycat crime in SVJOs and examine the correlates of self-reported copycat criminal behaviors. Concerning prevalence, about one fourth of the juveniles reportedthat they have attempteda copycat crime. The correlates of copycat behavior include a set of media and peer-related attitudes. Academic and demographic characteristics are not foundto significantly relate to copycat crime. Additional research on specific media, such as video games, as well as offender/nonoffender comparisons is suggested.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Media echoes: Systemic effects of news coverage
- Author
-
Ray Surette
- Subjects
Child abuse ,History ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Echo (computing) ,Media coverage ,Advertising ,Miami ,Law ,Publicity ,News media ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,media_common - Abstract
This paper examines the effect of massive media coverage on a judicial system by analyzing 3,453 felony cases tried over a 10-year period. The cases span five years preceding and five years following two heavily covered daycare child abuse trials in Miami, Florida. Significant case-processing shifts provide evidence of coverage “echo” effects, which have been hypothesized to exist in the literature but have not been established empirically. High-profile case publicity echoes are thought to reverberate through judicial systems and to condition them to process similarly charged but nonpublicized cases differently than they would have been processed otherwise. Because they affect nonpublicized low-profile cases, news media echoes expand the effects of news coverage on the judicial system far beyond single high-profile cases. Although a significant echo is found in this study, it does not extend to all possible processing effects. The need to empirically study other media echoes in other jurisdictions is indi...
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. A serendipitous finding of a news media history effect: A research note
- Author
-
Ray Surette
- Subjects
business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Criminology ,Miami ,Social constructionism ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Newspaper ,Officer ,Psychology ,business ,Law ,Duty ,News media ,media_common ,Criminal justice ,Mass media - Abstract
On January 16, 1989, a Hispanic Miami police officer shot and killed a black motorcyclist in a predominantly black section of Miami. During the following week, the shooting and its aftermath received extensive newspaper, television, and radio coverage. In criminal justice research, history effects are a common concern but empirical demonstrations are rarely reported. As part of a larger study of police recruits' training and attitudes, the news coverage of this shooting was discovered to have influenced the attitudes of Hispanic recruits: it significantly altered their expectation that police officers would use their weapons while on duty. This effect was not observed in non-Hispanic recruits. This serendipitous finding points to the need for researchers to be alert to threats to validity, particularly as the mass media become more pervasive and more intrusive. Further, it empirically demonstrates the social construction of reality in operation.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. A Note on the Historical Relationship between the Economy and Police Organizational Activities
- Author
-
Ray Surette
- Subjects
05 social sciences ,Two step ,050401 social sciences methods ,050301 education ,Police department ,Criminology ,Vagrancy ,0504 sociology ,Sociology ,Time series ,Duration (project management) ,0503 education ,Law ,Criminal justice - Abstract
Works which have examined the relationship between economic conditions and the criminal justice system have usually attempted to explain criminality within specific, short term time periods. Conclusions based upon these efforts have been mixed and ambiguous. This present study uses Chicago Police Department variables as indicators of organizational activities and investigates the duration andpersistence of relationships between selected economic conditions andpolice organizational measures. Nearly 100 years of annual City of Chicago data are examined in a two step, lagged, time series regression analysis. The findings show that a persistent historical relationship exists between vagrancy arrests and economic conditions but does not exist between felonylmisdemeanor arrests or number of police employees and economic conditions. This present study suggests supportfor the previousfindings of Chambliss (1964, 1976), Wellford (1974), and Land and Felson (1976), and reveals the necessity of further model development in specifying the historical interaction between the economy and the criminal justice system. Lastly, it points to the value of developing and analysing long term historical data bases.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Media Technology and the Courts: The Case of Closed Circuit Video Arraignments in Miami, Florida
- Author
-
W. Clinton Terry and Ray Surette
- Subjects
Misdemeanor ,media_common.quotation_subject ,050901 criminology ,05 social sciences ,Miami ,Criminology ,Eleventh ,Perception ,Political science ,Normative ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Public defender ,Affect (linguistics) ,0509 other social sciences ,business.job_title ,business ,Law ,Legitimacy ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,media_common - Abstract
The normative and policy implications of introducing video technologies into the courtroom are analyzed in this work. Examining video misdemeanor arraignments conducted in Miami's Eleventh Judicial Circuit, reveals a dis ruption of normative expectations within the courtroom, especially on the part of public defenders. Such latent consequences suggest that some defendants may not be getting the full benefit of constitutionally guaranteed due process protections. They also suggest an increased depersonalization of courtroom interactions and the possibility of negatively altered perceptions upon the part of courtroom actors and public onlookers. Because these percep tions affect the legitimacy with which courtroom procedures are held, the policy implications of introducing video technologies, along the lines of this study's findings, require careful consideration.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Processing Citizens' Disputes Outside the Courts
- Author
-
Ray Surette and Ross F. Conner
- Subjects
Plaintiff ,Dispute settlement ,business.industry ,General Social Sciences ,Dispute mechanism ,Public relations ,Alternative dispute resolution ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Law ,Respondent ,Mediation ,Empirical evidence ,Psychology ,business ,health care economics and organizations - Abstract
Citizen dispute processing programs are becoming more common in the United States as an alternative to expensive, time-consuming litigation in court. Although no empirical evidence has been presented to date on the effectiveness of this type of mediation program, policy makers are calling for an increase in the number of such programs. This article reports on the results of an outcome evaluation of the Orange County (Florida) Bar Association's Citizen Dispute Settlement Project. The results indicate that complainants, respondents, and hearing officers are generally very satisfied with the hearings. In a three-week follow-up, complainant satisfaction increased, while respondent satisfaction stayed at the original high level. A quasi-experimental comparison of hearing and no- hearing groups of disputants indicated that mediation programs of this type may not be particularly effective for long-term solutions of underlying problems. The implications of these results are discussed for public policy-making and for theoretical refinement of the mediation concept.
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Television Viewing and Support of Punitive Criminal Justice Policy
- Author
-
Ray Surette
- Subjects
Television viewing ,Punitive damages ,Criminal justice policy ,Journalism ,Sociology ,Criminology ,Social psychology ,Economic Justice - Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.