The dramatic expansion of federal criminal law jurisdiction and policing responsibilities in recent times has raised questions regarding the historical origins of these developments and their impact upon the continuing efficacy of the nation\u27s federal system of government. This dissertation examines, within the context of federal criminal law enforcement and the evolving nature of crime, those social, economic, and legal forces and events that played a critical role in the growth of the states\u27 police powers and made federal collaboration an increasingly important factor in the suppression of crime. Since the founding of this nation, federal anti-crime legislation, which tended to be reactionary in its formulation, inconsistent in its...
This paper, part of a symposium, examines the federal government\u27s sustained effort to recast sta...
Lost in the discussions of the federalization of crime is the one clause in the Constitution that ac...
This Article examines the endurance of police localism amid the improbable growth of the FBI in the ...
The dramatic expansion of federal criminal law jurisdiction and policing responsibilities in recent ...
The federalization of American criminal law was not an issue that would have been discussed prior to...
This paper explains the growth of the FBI (“Bureau”) in the United States at a time when criminal ju...
The goal of this article is to show intergovernmental relations at a crossroads. For two decades, th...
Traditionally, U.S.-state criminal justice relations have been conceived in two-dimensional terms, w...
Under the federal system in the United States, the states and localities traditionally have held the...
Criminal law enforcement in the United States is multijurisdictional. Local, state, and federal pros...
The Bureau of Investigation, direct precursor to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), was crea...
The role that the Federal Government should play in the control of crime in a federal system continu...
The first historical account of federal crime control policy, "From Social Welfare to Social Control...
In the mid-196s, a crime wave of epic proportions was perceived to be sweeping across the United Sta...
At periodic intervals during the present century the American crime problem has aroused agitated p...
This paper, part of a symposium, examines the federal government\u27s sustained effort to recast sta...
Lost in the discussions of the federalization of crime is the one clause in the Constitution that ac...
This Article examines the endurance of police localism amid the improbable growth of the FBI in the ...
The dramatic expansion of federal criminal law jurisdiction and policing responsibilities in recent ...
The federalization of American criminal law was not an issue that would have been discussed prior to...
This paper explains the growth of the FBI (“Bureau”) in the United States at a time when criminal ju...
The goal of this article is to show intergovernmental relations at a crossroads. For two decades, th...
Traditionally, U.S.-state criminal justice relations have been conceived in two-dimensional terms, w...
Under the federal system in the United States, the states and localities traditionally have held the...
Criminal law enforcement in the United States is multijurisdictional. Local, state, and federal pros...
The Bureau of Investigation, direct precursor to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), was crea...
The role that the Federal Government should play in the control of crime in a federal system continu...
The first historical account of federal crime control policy, "From Social Welfare to Social Control...
In the mid-196s, a crime wave of epic proportions was perceived to be sweeping across the United Sta...
At periodic intervals during the present century the American crime problem has aroused agitated p...
This paper, part of a symposium, examines the federal government\u27s sustained effort to recast sta...
Lost in the discussions of the federalization of crime is the one clause in the Constitution that ac...
This Article examines the endurance of police localism amid the improbable growth of the FBI in the ...