The Use of Force Questions: How did you interpret the patient and her motivations in the story? I interpreted the patient as being very neglectful. She was motivated by the idea of keeping her secret hidden so that she could escape having to bear the experience of getting diagnosed with this disease and going through the torture. How did you interpret the doctor and his motivations in the story? I interpreted the doctor as not only doing his job‚ but doing it with a purpose. He was very caring‚
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1 USE OF FORCE BY BANKS I do agree that‚use of force to recover loans is not desirable banking practice.The term banking means accepting deposits from public for the purpose of lending in a profitable manner.When banks asset becomes NPA banks fails to recover it by soft skill like public notices‚ legal notice ‚it may be permitted to use trained‚skilled recovery agents with the prior permission of higher banks officials . After all its public money ‚bank has every right to recover its assets. But
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When examining the issue of police use-of-force‚ the issue of what conduct constitutes too much force must also be addressed. The legal assessment for excessive force is whether the officer reasonably believed such force was necessary to accomplish a lawful police purpose (McEwen‚ 1996). Another concern for many is the possibility of racial profiling among certain officers. Allegations of the use of excessive force by police officers have fueled the debate over possible racial profiling and have
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like to convince people to do what we want‚ but it’s really all about how we do what we do to persuade someone. There are different methods to persuade someone such as in “The Use of Force” by William Carlos Williams where the characters persuade one another just like someone in modern day society would. In “The Use of Force”‚ the doctor finds Mathilda to be “an unusually attractive little thing and as strong as a heifer in appearance” (Williams 1) but Mathilda gives the doctor a distrustful look
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In “The Use of Force” the doctor and the young girl Mathilda have a very odd relationship. When the doctor first meets the young girl‚ sick and lying on her kitchen floor he founds her to be unusually attractive. When the doctor first meets her‚ him seems to more interested in her looks than what is actually wrong with her. The young girl is trying hard to keep the secret of her sickness and in doing so is very unwilling to help the doctor in anyway. The task the doctor had would have been easier
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Predictive Policing By Jamia Yant April 13th‚ 2012 In order to effectively compare and contrast the application of information technology (IT) to optimize police departments’ performance to reduce crime versus random patrols of the streets‚ we first have to look at exactly what information technology is available to police today. The term predictive policing is the name given to “any policing strategy or tactic that develops and uses information and advanced analysis to inform
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Within policing‚ some would argue that the use of force is a necessary component for police officers as it is used as a form of self-defence to protect the officer from any danger against a potential threat. The ‘use of force’ can be justified as using “the amount of force necessary to mitigate an incident‚ make an arrest‚ or protect themselves or others from harm”. However‚ through the years it has become a controversial topic within policing’s and has resulted in many cases and allegations against
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The improvement of police crime analysis and related resource allocation can be accredited to GIS technology. Even though GIS technology can be an efficient and effective process in policing limited empirical assessment has been conducted. There are four major applications that make up GIS in policing. 1. Computerized crime mapping/crime analysis. 2. "Hot spots" identification. 3. Improving command-level decision making. 4. Geographical investigative analysis (primarily offender profiling). “The
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CRIMINOLOGY AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE AZA1282 TABLE OF CONTENT 1. INTRODUCTION……………………………………………………………… 3 2. USE OF DEADLY FORCE…………………………………………………… 3 3. THE CONSTITUTIONAL ERA………………………………………………. 4 4. OLD SECTION 49 VERSUS NEW SECTION 49…………………………..5 5. PRIVATE DEFENCE…………………………………………………………..5 6. PREVENTION OF CRIME…………………………………………………….6 7. FUNDAMENTAL HUMAN RIGHTS………………………………………….6 8. CONCLUSION…………………………………………………………………7 9. REFERENCES…………………………………………………………………8
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UNDERSTANDING COMMUNITY POLICING IN 21st CENTURY AMERICA By Ryan Montgomery Dr. V. Batchelor GEN 411 April 2017 Abstract Table of contents Introduction Problem statement The world is a highly dynamic place. Each and every day‚ individuals‚ industries‚ and nations conjure up new ways of doing things and find effective approached to better address the problems and challenges that they face. In the United States‚ the policing department is tasked with
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