MODULE 4 REFLECTION

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ch03.pdf

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C H A P T E R T H R E E

T H E C R I M I N A L J U S T I C E S Y S T E M I N I T S E N V I R O N M E N T

Criminal Justice Organizations: Administration and Management

Learning Objectives

 Understand the influence the environment has on criminal justice agencies.

 Be able to discuss the major environmental influences on criminal justice agencies.

 Understand the political environment of the criminal justice system.

 Be able to explain environmental uncertainty vs. certainty.

 Understand how environmental forces can de-couple large organizations.

 Understand the process of scanning the environment.

 Understand how agency executives manage environmental inputs with symbolism.

Defining the Environment

 An organization’s environment is any external phenomenon, event, group, individual, or system.

 Environmental change causes organizational change.

 The relationship between an organization and its environment is interdependent. o The organization is affected by its environment,

and o The environment is affected by the organization.

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Defining the Environment

Defining the Environment Elements

 Technology

o Transportation and communication changes affect how criminal justice agencies do their jobs.

o Creates completely new forms of criminality.

 Law

o Statutory laws like ‘three strikes’ and the USA PATRIOT ACT profoundly change criminal justice agencies.

o Court rulings affect criminal procedures.

o Civil litigation influences agency behavior.

Defining the Environment Elements

 Economic conditions

o Influence the availability of resources.

o Unemployment may increase criminality.

 Demographic factors

o Large proportions of crime prone (young) citizens increase overall crime rates.

o Movement of working class and wealthy individuals from communities reduces available resources.

o Immigration (legal and illegal) creates new challenges in justice administration.

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Defining the Environment Elements

 Cultural conditions o Dramatic changes in culture may result in new or

different laws. o Competing cultures may cause social conflict.

 Ecological conditions

o Different ecological needs (e.g. agrarian, industrial, service, etc.) create their own challenges for criminal justice.

o Conflict over scarce resources affects criminal justice agencies.

o Increased awareness of ecological issues may result in additional responsibilities for criminal justice.

Defining the Environment Elements

 Political conditions

o Agencies are affected by political pressure from advocacy, interest, and constituent groups.

o Elected criminal justice actors are highly influenced by political conditions.

o Changing social and cultural norms eventually influence result in political change.

The Political Environment

 A complex decision-making apparatus containing both formal and informal overlapping subsystems (Fairchild and Webb, 1995). o Formal

• Legislative bodies, city councils, etc.

• Courts

o Informal • Pressure from political activists and advocates

• Informal pressure from the formal system

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Task Environmental Elements Specific to the Criminal Justice System

 The forces in the environment that are related directly to the goal-setting and goal-directed

activities of the criminal justice system (Steers, 1977). Six categories (Lauffer, 1984). o Beneficiaries

o Funders

o Providers of non-fiscal resources

o Providers of complimentary services

o Competitors

o Legitimizers

Environmental States

 Organizations are affected by the state of their environment.

o Simple versus Complex

• Simple – homogeneous environments with few elements

• Complex – heterogeneous environments with many elements

o Static versus Dynamic

• Static – predictable environments

• Dynamic – unpredictable environments

Organizational Response to the Environment

 The more dynamic and complex the environment the greater the uncertainty.

o Environmental uncertainty

• Lack of information needed for decision making

• Inability to estimate effect prior to implementation

• Lack of information about the cost of a bad decision

o Decoupled organizations – multiple sub- environments

o Dominant coalition – leaders

o Work processors – do the actual work

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Organizational Response to the Environment

Managing Environmental Forces

Managing Environmental Forces

 All organizations are vulnerable to environmental forces, but these can be managed.

o Influencing input by providing expertise to environmental factors

o Using symbols and rhetoric to influence the environmental response

o Responding to client demand

o Decreasing vulnerability to pressure by creating autonomy

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Implications for Administrators

 The role of management is to mitigate the effect of environmental pressure and create predictability.

 Administrators should be highly protective of the organizations core technologies and competencies.

 Constant scanning of the environment is necessary for a proactive response to and/or the protection against environmentally caused change.

Chapter Summary

 There is interdependence between the criminal justice system and its environment.

 Changes in the environment require criminal justice agencies to adapt.

 New technology changes social structures, organizational opportunities, and crime patterns to which agencies need to adapt.

 Statutory and civil laws directly alter mandates and constraints on the system.

 Economic conditions affect agency budgets, scarcity in staff selection, and also may affect crime patterns and rates.

Chapter Summary

 Demographic shifts affect local budges and demands for service.

 Changes in culture require agencies to adapt to citizens with new demands for services and justice outcomes.

 Changing climate patterns, community size, and economic base have far ranging effects on economic and cultural conditions that, in turn, affect agencies.

 Political conditions faced by agencies have the most direct impact on agency mandates and constraints.

 The political environment is a complex process of formal and informal political subsystems.

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Chapter Summary

 Changing environmental forces require the criminal justice agency to either make constant changes or to operate with outdated missions, policies and procedures.

 Agency field workers and executives work with different environmental forces and expectations.

 Agency field workers and executives have different understandings of the agency’s mandate and appropriate activities of its members.

 Scanning means observing the environment for potential change and adapting the organization to respond to it.

 Agencies put forward the least costly change to meet the demands from the environment. These are often symbolic.

Thinking Point and Question

 In an effort to increase employment, the Plantersville City Council successfully convinced a large corporation to locate a call center within its municipal boundaries.

 This call center employs 1,000 low wage employees.

 Almost immediately it became apparent that this influx of low wage employees created numerous challenges (crime, transportation, population density, etc.) for the local police department.

Thinking Point and Question

 Now the Mayor is trying to convince a meat packing plant to locate near the city.

 This plant will likely hire a large number of low wage and unskilled labor employees.

 As the Chief of Police, how would you use your experience with the call center to mitigate the potential environmental change that would likely result from the new meat packing facility?