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Hale et al: Criminology 2e

Chapter 22

The Criminal Justice System forms a large burden on public resources. In 2007-2008, the Government would spend £22.7bn on police forces, prosecution and defence lawyers, courts, probation and prisons. The Criminal Justice System is a collection of autonomous and semi-autonomous agencies, such as the police, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), the Crown and Magistrates’ courts and the correctional services (prisons etc). Each has its own objectives, principles and core responsibilities such as prosecuting and punishing offenders, reducing crime, maintaining community safety, caring for victims as well as protecting the rights and interests of the accused. The building blocks of criminal justice can be summarized as follows:

The chapter provides an insight into all these areas and agencies and concludes that the key unifying principle to which all should subscribe is that the accused has the right to a fair and just process, from investigation to arrest, to trial and sentencing through to release from prison.