The Criminal Justice System

Words: 649
Pages: 3

The origin and history of the Criminal Justice system is an immensely interesting topic as without it today in the modern world, things would go terribly incorrect and corrupt. The origin of the Criminal Justice system all started way back from the colonial period. In the colonial period, the early Americans were sluggishly developing ways to handle their society. Obviously, at that period they did not know of any “crime” they were extremely dependant upon religion and sin. In the early ages, physical action was taken against crimes that threatened religion and other religiously admired subjects. These physical actions usually embarrassed and degraded the person being punished, which is a way people believed punishment should be given.
As society slowly progressed into the modern world, the beginning of making exceptional laws was modified and reviewed to get a crystal clear view of what the modern world was going to be resemble. Modernly we put criminals into jail, although this action is still torturing the criminal and degraded her or him, it was more reasonable and fair. Modernly, Criminal Justice depicts the benefit of morality as it is superior to being humiliated and embarrassed in the public eye. Slowly the religion aspect in the Criminal Justice topic
…show more content…
Gradually watchmen became a thing as low-paid citizens were assigned duty to look over a certain location at night. Eventually this expanded to being a day thing rather than a night thing because at night the watchmen weren’t proficient at their jobs and often got intoxicated on duty. People quarreled between the privilege of having night-time watchmen, or day-time watchman, eventually they just ended up establishing several departments in different cities. These were departments of policing and now they are modernly dispersed among the world