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12 J. Ethnicity Crim. Just. 1 (2014)

handle is hein.journals/wecj12 and id is 1 raw text is: 


Journal ofEthnicity in CriminalJustice, 12:1-3, 2014         Routledge
Copyright 0 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC                      Taylor& Francis Group
ISSN: 1537-7938 print / 1537-7946 online
DOI: 10.1080/15377938.2014.857949



                Guest Editor's Introduction


                             OBI  N. I. EBBE
      Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Geography, University of Tennessee
                   at Chattanooga, Chattanooga, Tennessee, USA


This special issue is on comparative and international criminal justice. It is
undeniable  that the study of comparative and international criminal justice
sharpens  our awareness  of the ubiquitous operational dynamics in criminal
law  and of the variety of cultural concepts that brought different criminal
justice systems into being. In the process of studying the ways  in which
social order is achieved and  maintained  across nations, we learn how  to
modify  our own  society, bearing in mind that what works  for one country
may  not work  for another (Ebbe, 1996, 2000).
     The relevance  of studying comparative and  international criminal jus-
tice can be  unmistakably  seen in the three articles presented in this cur-
rent issue. The three articles describe many countries and cultures, namely,
Australia/Australian aborigines, China, Finland, Russia, Somalia, Nigeria, and
Bangladesh.
     The foci of the articles are very close. The first article focuses on the
operations  of the criminal justice system, whereas the last two focus  on
perceptions of the operation of the justice system. In Distrust of the Police
in a Nordic  Welfare State: Victimization, Discrimination, and Trust in the
Police by Russian and  Somali Minorities in Helsinki, KAdridinen and Niemi
report on  a study of Russian (n  = 562) and  Somali (n  = 484)  minorities
living in Helsinki, Finland, and their trust in the police. They found that 90%
of Russians have solid trust in the police, whereas 68% of Somalis have solid
trust in the Helsinki police. They also found that the homogeneous Finnish
people  have solid trust in their police.
     Chui and  Cheng  contribute the second article, Chinese Migrants' Per-
ceptions of the Queensland  Criminal Justice System. They studied 264 Chi-
nese  migrants living in Brisbane (the capital of Queensland, Australia) and
measured  their perceptions of the integrity, competence, and fairness of var-
ious departments  of the criminal justice system in dealing with the Chinese


    Address correspondence to Dr. Obi N. I. Ebbe, Department of Sociology, Anthropology
and Geography, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, 615 McCallie Avenue, Chattanooga,
TN 37403-2598. E-mail: obi-ebbe@utc.edu


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