ABSTRACT

The proliferation of information systems throughout the criminal justice system has prompted many universities supporting criminal justice programs to add criminal justice information systems technology to their curriculums. Several universities have gone so far as to hire professors with specializations in information technology and to offer criminal justice information systems as an area of concentration.

Introduction to Criminal Justice Information Systems gives an overview of the various software systems and technologies currently used in the criminal justice environment. The book covers a variety of topics critical to each member of the criminal justice system: police, prosecutor, courts, and corrections. It details the current systems in use, how they are used, and how separate systems interact with others. It also suggests how the current technology and the processes built upon it will evolve.

While designed as a textbook to meet the needs of an introductory criminal justice information technology course, Introduction to Criminal Justice Information Systems is also a flexible resource useful to professionals in relevant areas of the criminal justice system. With rapidly increasing development and use of technology in modern law enforcement, this book provides a much-needed reference for those who are responsible for its implementation as well as an essential introduction to those who will become responsible for it. An instructor's manual is available as an electronic download upon request.

chapter four|31 pages

Police computer-aided dispatch systems

chapter five|25 pages

Police record management systems

chapter six|26 pages

Police workgroup applications

chapter seven|23 pages

Mobile computing

chapter eight|26 pages

Crime analysis and crime mapping

chapter nine|25 pages

Corrections information technology

chapter ten|23 pages

Prosecutor Information Management Systems

chapter eleven|29 pages

Eleven Court Management Information Systems

chapter thirteen|14 pages

The future of technology in law enforcement