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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
601

Implications of Community Prosecution for Prosecutors and Community: A Case Study of the Community Prosecution Initiative in Red Hook, Kings County, New York

Irons, Cheryl Lynn January 2009 (has links)
Prosecutors are powerful actors in the criminal justice system. Scholars make the argument that prosecutors exercise far more control over criminal matters than any other agency (Thomas and Fitch, 1976, p. 509; McDonald, 1979, p. 18-19, Wickersham, 1931) . Over time, various changes have augmented prosecutorial power, ranging from the decision to make the office of the prosecutor an elected one, thereby affording prosecutors independence in carrying out their duties (Misner, 1996, p. 729), to the advent of determinant sentencing, resulting in shifting sentencing discretion away from the courts to the prosecutor (Vorenberg, 1981, p. 1525, 1529). This research hypothesized that community prosecution represents another development that will result in increasing the influence of the office of the prosecutor. Traditionally, prosecutors have been oriented toward successful case disposition. The case-by-case methodology has involved little contact with the community. In addition, the prosecutorial focal point is on felony cases, while lower level offenses generally receive little time or attention. The emergence of community prosecution challenges the traditional prosecution role and its emphasis on the more serious matters and winning cases, and promises positive effects for the "communities" targeted. Through a case study of its application in Kings County, New York, this dissertation explores community prosecution and its impact on the role of the prosecutor and for the community, in the context of a community court implemented in Red Hook, Brooklyn. Focusing on the Red Hook example, the study drew on three principal sources of data to examine the community prosecution innovation, including: a) arrest data, aggregated monthly, for the three police precincts that handle cases originating in Red Hook, covering the years 1998 through 2001 (46 months per precinct, n=138 ); b) precinct level arrest and court case filings for criminal incidents that took place in Red Hook and other Kings County locations for two distinct time periods (the third quarter of 1998, (n = 19,296) and the first quarter of 2001, (n = 22,988)); and c) court case data from the Red Hook Community Justice Center (hereafter, RHCJC) 2000 through 2001 (51 weeks, n=4,088). Several different types of complementary analyses, including HLM, contrasted changes in case types and defendant characteristics in the study locale over time associated with this community-oriented form of prosecution. The analyses also compared these changes to the caseloads from neighboring communities that did not have access to this innovation, where cases were processed in the traditional manner. Specific hypotheses tested about the effects of the community prosecution innovation included the following: 1) Implementation of the community prosecution initiative via the community court will result in an increase in the volume and/or proportion of arrests for minor offenses in precincts operating within the community court's jurisdiction. That increase will not be experienced by precincts not involved with the court. 2) The community prosecution strategy will draw defendants into the Red Hook criminal justice system who would not otherwise have been involved in the system, specifically including greater proportions of young minority males and individuals with no prior criminal histories. This research also involved a limited inquiry into how community members were responding to the community prosecution initiative. Given the purpose of community prosecution, to engage the community in handling its unique crime problems in an effort to make them feel safer, it was of interest to know whether there was any evidence that this happened in Red Hook. To that end, the research drew upon qualitative data, including: a) a series of non-probability based community surveys performed within the Red Hook jurisdiction in 1999 (n=980), 2000 (n=1,744) and 2001 (n=1,169) and b) two focus groups (n=12; n=18) conducted by this researcher in May of 2003. These other data sources provided context, allowing for better understanding the results of the analyses. Findings indicated slight effects of community prosecution in the anticipated direction: The volume of arrests from the Red Hook precincts (Data Set 1) increased slightly after the court was implemented. In addition, findings from the RHCJC caseload (Data Set 3) indicated that post-implementation, misdemeanor cases increased slightly but significantly. Comparisons of the post-implementation caseload filed from Red Hook precinct arrests with the control group (consisting of pre-implementation, Red Hook filings and both pre-and post-implementation filings from the arrests made by the rest of the Kings County precincts (Data Set 2)) indicated that the caseload proportion of misdemeanors in post-implementation Red Hook filings increased significantly when compared with the control group filings. In addition, analysis of Data Set 2 (comparison of caseload characteristics) indicated both a significant increase in the proportion of the post-implementation, Red Hook cases made up of Hispanic defendants, and a significant increase in the caseload proportion consisting of defendants with no prior record of criminal convictions. The primary findings from the qualitative data (Survey and Focus Group Data) indicated that community respondents appeared to be more satisfied with the court system and seemed to feel safer after the RHCJC was implemented. There was also some indication of race based differences in responses: White respondents seemed generally more positive about perceived post-implementation changes in Red Hook than minority respondents. / Criminal Justice
602

Emerging Adulthood and the Arrested Adolescent Offender

Salvatore, Christopher January 2010 (has links)
This study is an examination of how delayed transitions to adulthood have influenced the period of active offending for low-level offenders. This research has implications for the criminal justice system, its policies directed toward dealing with low-level offenders, and the branch of criminological research that explores offender taxonomies and the relationship between age and crime. Arnett's (2000) theory argues that emerging adulthood is a new stage of the life course, neither adolescence nor young adulthood, that is the result of several areas of social change. During this stage, despite having reached biological maturity, individuals postpone the achievement of adult commitments and responsibilities. Combined with a lack of traditional social bonds and a failure to meet various life course turning points, these individuals exist in a state of "arrested adolescence." During this state, many have the opportunity to explore their identities in areas such as romantic relationships and work. These explorations have also been theorized to include deviant and criminal behavior. While Arnett's theory has been cited extensively, only a handful of studies have attempted to empirically test its tenets with regard to delinquency or criminality. Prior research in life course criminology has established several different offender typologies linked to the impact of transitions to adult roles as turning points (for most) away from criminality (see for example, Laub & Sampson, 2003; Moffitt, Caspi, Rutter, & Silva, 2001). The present study answered the following research question; "Does the emerging adulthood stage of the life course influence offending trajectories?" Specifically, it predicted that emerging adulthood has delayed transitions to adult roles for those in their early to mid twenties. As a result, there is a higher rate of low-level, non-violent crimes such as vandalism and disorderly conduct for certain (arrested adolescent) offenders. Defined as a low-level criminal offender between the ages of 18 and 25, the arrested adolescent offender has yet to successfully transition to adult social roles (e.g., marriage, parenthood) that inhibit deviance and increase traditional social bonding. If Arnett's theory of emerging adulthood is correct, arrested adolescent offenders will continue to commit low-level offenses at rates typically seen in adolescents. Beyond examining this core question, this dissertation also extends Arnett's theory in three significant ways: by utilizing the theory to explicitly examine crime and deviance, clarifying how emerging adulthood influences offending, and by exploring whether the delay of turning points (e.g., marriage, parenting) and changes in social bonds (e.g., religious participation, bonds with family) influences offending. These questions were addressed using three waves of data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Udry, 1998). At each wave of data, measures of crime, arrested adolescent vs. life course persistent offending (minor vs. serious) and drug use, arrested adolescent vs. life course persistent drug use (minor vs. serious) were examined as dependent variables. These indicators were selected from the crime and delinquency scales available in all three waves of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. Arrested adolescent (minor) crimes consist of low-level offenses such as drunken and disorderly conduct and shoplifting. Arrested adolescent (minor) drug use is defined as using "softer" drugs such as alcohol and marijuana. Life course persistent (serious) crime is defined as more severe types of offenses such as burglary and selling drugs. Life course persistent (serious) drug use is defined as the frequent use of "harsher" drugs such as cocaine. These data were analyzed cross-sectionally using both bivariate and multivariate analyses. At waves 1 and 2, bivariate relationships between indicators of arrested adolescence and offending allowed an exploration of how these factors relate to offending during late childhood and adolescence. At wave 3, when members of the sample are in the emerging adulthood stage of the life course, a series of regression models examined how measures of arrested adolescence related to offending. The findings of this dissertation support the idea that many traditional turning points and social bonds do operate effectively during emerging adulthood. Turning points including education and hours worked were found to predict arrested adolescent offending. Social bonds including religious participation, economic stability, and parental attachment also were significant predictors of arrested adolescent offending. However, many of the other turning points, such as having children and military service, and social bonds, such as job satisfaction, that were found to be effective at reducing offending in other samples were not significant. Results suggest that specific turning points and social bonds are relevant factors in reducing offending for emerging adults. These findings, taken as a whole, suggest that emerging adulthood is a factor influencing offending. Emerging adulthood has the potential to alter patterns of offending over the life course, and there is a need for prospective longitudinal studies to examine the long-term influence of emerging adulthood on life course offending. / Criminal Justice
603

Perceptions of Southwestern African-Americans with regard to safety and the police: An exploratory study

Wynn, Heather Ellen January 1993 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to investigate perceptions of African-Americans in the Southwest with regard to police, crime, and safety. As part of a larger study of a 12,500 sample of White, Asian, Hispanic, American Indian, and African-Americans, a questionnaire was mailed to 5,000 randomly sampled African-Americans, stratified by gender, age, State of residence, and area of residence. Frequency analyses, t-test analyses, and ANOVA analyses, were conducted. Results indicated that African-American males had more positive attitudes toward safety than females. Also noted was that the age group of 60+ had more positive attitudes toward police than other age groups (18-25, 26-40, 40-60), as well as a better awareness of community policing than the age group of 18-25.
604

Tuberculosis prevention: A program for incarcerated adolescent males

Schultz, Joella G. (Joella Grosser), 1937- January 1996 (has links)
This study was designed to evaluate the effectiveness of a tuberculosis (TB) educational and behavioral intervention with incarcerated adolescent males, aged 11 to 17, who were taking Isoniazid for TB infection. Using a quasi-experimental design, a treatment group (n=10) and a comparison group (n=10) were given a knowledge pretest and posttest, self-esteem scale, and health value scale. Additionally, the treatment group received the intervention. Research questions addressed both knowledge and completion of therapy. Analysis of data on differences in TB knowledge between the two groups using t tests showed no significant differences. Chi square test was used to evaluate the effect of the intervention on the completion of therapy. There was no significant increase in medication adherence between the two groups when they left the correctional facilities. However, total number of completions was greater in the treatment group when those who were returned or remained incarcerated were included.
605

Urban Indians, people of color and the Albuquerque Police Department

King, Adrienne Jean, 1973- January 1998 (has links)
This thesis is a study of the perceptions urban American Indians and people of color have toward the Albuquerque Police Department, focusing on the citizen complaint process. Analyzing these perceptions and hearing their experiences provides insight to how these peoples view their local law enforcement similarly and differently from each other and Anglos. While the issues of other peoples of color may be addressed, the needs of the indian community are rarely addressed. Without visibility and advocacy, American Indians are not represented and the issues important to them cannot be heard. Since little has been written on Indian and police relations it is possible to extrapolate from the experiences of other urban communities of color. To better understand the experiences of people of color with the Albuquerque Police Department three research methods are used: citizen complainant satisfaction surveys, interviews with citizen organizations and an individual case study.
606

The insanity defense| Public opinion and the public's tendency to implicate mental illness in high-profile crimes

Elmore, Scott K. 07 May 2014 (has links)
<p> Media accounts have influenced public opinion about the insanity defense and have given rise to misperceptions about its purpose and rate of usage. This study hypothesizes that the public is more likely to implicate mental illness in irrational crimes and that the more media exposure given to the case, the more likely the public is to implicate mental illness. This study also seeks to establish current public opinion of the utility and prevalence of the insanity defense. The results of this research do not conclusively indicate that amount of media attention can be used to predict the public's tendency to implicate mental illness as a motive for crime, thus, hypothesis one was only partially supported. Meanwhile, hypothesis two, participants will be more likely to implicate mental illness in crime that they perceive to be irrational was not supported by this study. The third hypothesis, participants will be more likely to give a verdict of NGRI if they implicated mental illness as the motive for the crime, was only partially supported by this study. With the ever-growing media attention devoted to implicating mental illness in high-profile crimes, results from this study suggest that the public does not correlate the amount of media attention dedicated to high-profile cases with mental illness.</p>
607

Dynamiques d’intimidation contre la force publique : enjeux pour les policiers et les agents correctionnels

Gomez del Prado, Grégory 12 1900 (has links)
Une des caractéristiques fondamentales des policiers et des agents correctionnels est le recours légitime à la coercition pour imposer leur autorité. Cette force publique doit donc, en théorie, avoir le dessus sur toute forme de force privée. Dans l’étude des phénomènes de violence, cette caractéristique rend leur victimisation singulière. À ce jour, les formes d’influence, de pressions indues et d’intimidation vécus par les agents de la force publique demeurent relativement peu étudiées. Les objectifs de cette thèse sont d’améliorer notre compréhension des dynamiques d’intimidation, de soulever les différents enjeux pour la force publique et de proposer une théorie de l’intimidation criminelle. La force publique étant, avant toute chose, une émanation de l’État, nous avons commencé par analyser la problématique de l’intimidation criminelle de manière plus globale. En testant la théorie de l’action de sécurité (Cusson, 2010), nous avons constaté qu’une force publique intimidée et corrompue entraîne une perte de légitimité et une inefficacité du système judiciaire dans sa lutte contre la criminalité. Nous avons ensuite adopté une perspective interactionniste pour comprendre les dynamiques d’intimidation au quotidien. Nous nous sommes demandés quels étaient les éléments qui rendaient une intimidation crédible et grave pour les policiers. En identifiant leur monde d’objets (Blumer, 1986), nous avons constaté que les actes d’intimidation qui survenaient en dehors du cadre professionnel étaient jugés plus graves par les policiers et que l’appartenance de l’intimidateur à une organisation criminelle entraînait une augmentation de la gravité de la menace. Ensuite, nous nous sommes interrogés sur la notion d’identité sociale des agents correctionnels victimes d’intimidation (Tedeschi et Felson, 1994). Nous avons constaté que les intimidations mineures mais répétées avaient tendance à modifier les pratiques professionnelles des surveillants. Une analyse intégrée de ces perspectives met en lumière l’existence de deux formes d’intimidation : une intimidation réactive et peu sévère en nature et une intimidation planifiée et grave. Elle soulève également trois enjeux pour la force publique : son aspect symbolique, la transformation de son action et sa légitimité. En intégrant ces enjeux, une théorie de l’intimidation criminelle est proposée. En dernier lieu, des solutions préventives et répressives sont avancées pour lutter contre ce phénomène. / One of the most salient characteristics of police and correctional officers lies in their legitimate use of coercion to impose their authority. In theory, this public force must have precedence over any private force. In the study of violence, this feature makes their victimization particularly peculiar. Unlawful pressure and influence as well as intimidation tactics experienced by law enforcement officers have not been the focus of much attention. This thesis aims at bringing a better understanding of the intimidation dynamics, at identifying the major issues for the public force and at offering a more general theory of criminal intimidation. Public force being an inherently State function, we focussed first at the problem of intimidation in a global manner. By testing the theory of the action of security (Cusson, 2010), we observed that an intimidated and corrupted public force leads to a loss of legitimacy and efficiency of the judicial system in its fight against crime. We then adopted an interactionist approach to understand the everyday dynamics of intimidation. We asked ourselves what were the factors that officers considered severe and credible enough for them to consider an intimidation. By identifying the world of objects of police officers (Blumer, 1986), we observed that acts of intimidation that occurred outside the professional setting were considered more serious. Also, the fact that the intimidator belonged to a criminal organisation raised the gravity of the threat. Then, we looked into the social identities of correctional officers that experienced intimidation (Tedeschi et Felson, 1994). We discovered that minor but repeated acts of intimidation had a tendency to modify the professional practices of prison guards. An integrated analysis sheds light on two types of intimidation: on one side, a reactive and mild intimidation; on the other, a programmed and serious intimidation. This brings three issues for the public force: its symbolic aspects, a transformation of its action and its legitimacy. By integrating those issues, we have been able to offer a theory of the criminal intimidation. Lastly, preventive and repressive measures are discussed as a solution to criminal intimidation.
608

L’expérience de la violence en milieu psychiatrique : l’hypervigilance généralisée et le rôle du caring dans la modulation de la peur

Forté, Lydia 12 1900 (has links)
L’exposition à la violence dans le secteur de la santé affecte les employés et a également des implications sur la qualité des soins offerts. Les agressions en milieu de travail peuvent engendrer divers émotions ou comportements chez le personnel soignant, tels que la peur et l’évitement des patients (Gates, Gillespie, & Succop, 2011). La présente étude phénoménologique tente de comprendre et de décrire l’expérience des intervenants d’un hôpital psychiatrique lorsque ceux-ci ont été victimes d’un acte de violence grave de la part d’un patient, ainsi que les impacts engendrés sur les services offerts. L’approche phénoménologique permet de porter un nouveau regard sur cette problématique en plongeant dans l’univers de chaque intervenant, comprendre l’interprétation donnée à l’acte de violence vécu. L’emploi de cette approche donne accès à davantage de contenu et permet de préciser de quelle façon leur quotidien est altéré par ce phénomène. Trente entrevues semi-structurées ont été réalisées, soit deux auprès de chacun des 15 participants (11 femmes) provenant de divers domaines professionnels œuvrant dans un hôpital psychiatrique. Les analyses sont basées sur la technique « Empirical Phenomenological Psychological » de Karlsson (1993). Une attention particulière a été portée quant à la possibilité d’expériences différentes selon le sexe des intervenants. L’analyse a fait ressortir quatre thèmes principaux qui sont présents indépendamment du sexe des intervenants, soit: l’hypervigilance, le caring, la peur spécifique du patient agresseur, puis la peur généralisée à tous les patients. Un état d’hypervigilance est retrouvé chez tous les intervenants qui ont été victimes d’agression de la part d’un patient. Comparativement aux intervenants qui ont assisté à l’escalade d’agressivité d’un patient, ceux ayant été agressés par surprise rapportent des répercussions de cette vigilance qui s’étendent jusqu’à leur vie personnelle. Une approche caring est présente chez la majorité des participants. Ceci implique une bienveillance et une authenticité envers le patient soigné. Mettant le patient au cœur de son intervention, l’intervenant « soignant » développe un lien de confiance et agit comme un agent de changement. Un sentiment de peur est également exprimé chez les participants. Celui-ci est modulé par la présence ou l’absence de caring. Les intervenants démontrant du caring ont développé une peur spécifique à leur agresseur, tandis que ceux ne manifestant peu ou pas de caring ont développé une peur généralisée de la clientèle. Suite à un évènement de violence, les intervenants étant caring le demeurent, alors que ceux n’étant peu ou pas caring seraient plutôt portés à se désinvestir et à se désengager des relations avec les patients. Engendrées par la violence subie en milieu hospitalier psychiatrique, l’hypervigilance et la peur, qu’elle soit spécifique ou généralisée, ont toutes deux des impacts sur la qualité des soins offerts. Un intérêt considérable devrait être porté au caring, qui vient moduler cette peur et les effets qui en découlent. Des recherches pourraient porter un éclairage sur l’origine du caring – est-ce que le caring est appris ou découle-t-il d’une vocation? Finalement, ces études pourraient établir des manières de renforcer ou de développer le caring. / Exposure to violence in the mental health sector both affects employees and has implications for the quality of care provided. These acts of aggression can have important effects on workplace conduct, generating various emotions and behaviors in healthcare workers, such as fear and avoidance of patients (Gates et al., 2011). This phenomenological study aims to describe and understand the ways in which acts of aggression from a patient may affect the health of workers in a psychiatric institute, their relationships with the patients and the services offered. The phenomenological approach allows for a novel outlook on this problem by diving into the experiential world of each participant and encouraging reflections on his or her own understandings and interpretations of violence. In this way, we gain key insight into the specific ways in which workplace violence affects daily life. Two semi-structured interviews were conducted with each of the 15 participants (11 women and 4 men) from various professional fields within a psychiatric hospital, totalling 30 interviews. The analyses are based on Karlsson’s "Empirical Phenomenological Psychological" technique (1993). Our analysis reveals four main themes that are present regardless of the sex of participants: hypervigilance, caring, specific fear towards the aggressor and generalized fear of all patients. A state of hypervigilance is found among all participants who have been victims of assault by a patient. Yet, compared to participants who witnessed the escalation of a patient's aggression, those who were taken by surprise in the attack more often reported that this hypervigilance extends beyond the workplace and into their personal lives. An emphasis on caring is present among the majority of participants. This outlook implies kindness and authenticity in the treatment of patients. Putting patients at the heart of one's work, the healthcare worker develops a relationship of trust and acts as an agent of change. A feeling of fear is also expressed by participants and is modulated by the presence or absence of caring. Those approaching patients with a caring disposition developed a specific fear of their aggressor, while those showing little or no caring developed a generalized fear of all patients. Following a violent event, caring participants maintained this outlook, while those demonstrating little to no caring were more inclined to disinvest and disengage from all patients. Moreover, hypervigilance and fear (both specific and generalized) caused by experiences of violence impact the quality of care provided. Considerable interest should thus be paid to caring, which can modulate fear and its effects. Additional research could shed light on the origins of caring: Is it learnt or does it result from a vocation? Finally, studies of this kind could establish or strengthen ways of developing this outlook.
609

Rizika (ne)sociální práce ve vězeních / Risks of (no)social work in prisons

Paulusová, Iva January 2016 (has links)
The Diploma thesis deals with risks that can appear while doing social work in prisons or also risks that follow from its absence. The thesis has two parts. The first part is theoretical, written from expert resources, general facts and concerned on connection of social work with penology - prison service. At the end of this part the thesis is dedicated to risks that follow from the connection. The second part is practical, concerned on a research which was done by qualitative form via questionnaire survey. The whole thesis is divided into chapters which are logically connected. The aim is to find out how the social work determines imprisonment of custodial sentence and where are the risks of doing social work. The practical part supports, confirms and extends the theoretical part.
610

"Restricted Movement" and Coordinates of Freedom: Southern Chain Gangs in Twentieth-Century American Literature and Film

Gorman, Gene I. January 2012 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Christopher P. Wilson / For more than a century, the chain gang has been glamorized, criticized, abhorred, and often explained away as an economic necessity or natural byproduct of historical circumstances. After Emancipation, this centuries-old approach to punishing criminals offered an immediate palliative for southern plantation owners in need of field hands, northern coal and steel interests and railroad tycoons in search of blasters and miners, and eventually government officials who identified the South's antiquated infrastructure as its greatest barrier to integration into a regional and national economy. Heavily influenced by Hollywood, the blues, oral histories and folkways, archived photographs, and literary representations, many people now view the chain gang as a relic of a bygone era of southern prejudice and brutality. After all, history does not cast the men and women who served on chain gangs as heroic workers and, if they are acknowledged at all, they are only occasionally figured as victims of the political, social, and economic forces that led to their convictions and servitude. And yet, paradoxically, labor historians and others have argued convincingly that the chain gang, even with all its warts and abuses, actually made southern economic progress possible. Entering this still-vibrant, contested territory, "Restricted Movement" and Coordinates of Freedom focuses on depictions of chain gangs in selected literary works and films from 1901 to 2000, including Charles W. Chesnutt's The Marrow of Tradition (1901) and All the King's Men (1946) by Robert Penn Warren and the films I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang (1932), Sullivan's Travels (1941), The Defiant Ones (1958), and O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000). This dissertation attempts to make sense of a multitude of historical and social conditions that bear specifically on chain gangs and convict labor, including black criminality, white supremacy, the Good Roads Movement, race-based electoral politics, and industrialization. In addition to exploring these vexed arguments about servitude and progress, this dissertation also explores how the chain gang, real and imagined, serves as its own special form of segregation. Beginning with the work of Edward L. Ayers, Alex Lichtenstein, Matthew Mancini, and others in the 1980s and 1990s, a handful of southern and labor historians broadened the study of postbellum race, crime, and punishment to consider whether convict-leasing programs and chain gangs in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries really did result in a form of "neo-slavery." In other words, these historians asked, did these practices actually "re-enslave" African Americans in the American South between 1865 and 1940? And if so, what were the social, political and cultural implications of this re-enslavement? How did these practices shape the experience and consciousness of both blacks and southern whites? Moreover, in a culture that speaks so often of slavery's terrible legacies, how might a deeper understanding of convict leasing and chain gangs offer its own particular lessons about race, history, and justice in the United States since the Civil War? My hope is that the methods and approaches laid out in this dissertation will invite other scholars to grapple with the ways in which chain gang history and cultural history inform one another. / Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2012. / Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. / Discipline: English.

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