The School of Criminal Justice is located in Newark, the largest
city in the state of New Jersey. Founded in 1666, Newark continues to
be a commercial and industrial center, located approximately twenty
minutes from midtown Manhattan.
The School of Criminal Justice
is one of several higher education programs located in Newark. Other
Rutgers programs include the Newark College of Arts and Sciences,
University College-Newark, the Graduate School-Newark, the College of
Nursing, the School of Law-Newark, and the Rutgers Business
School-Newark and New Brunswick. These institutions are joined by Essex
County Community College, New Jersey Institute of Technology, and the
University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey. Combined, they form
one of the newest higher education centers in the East.
The
School of Criminal Justice shares with the School of Law-Newark and the
provost`s office the new Center for Law and Justice at 123 Washington
Street on the Newark campus. This facility provides state-of-the-art
classrooms and libraries for both criminal justice and law collections,
and incorporates cutting-edge computer and multimedia technology. The
building opened in 1999.
The state legislature in 1968
authorized and directed Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, to
establish a School of Criminal Justice. The act stated:
The legislature finds there is a need in New Jersey for academic
contributions to the administration of criminal justice through
teaching, research, and leadership, including the training of
administrators and those requiring scientific background in this field,
by study and searching inquiries into crime causation, juvenile
delinquency, law enforcement procedure, criminal re-habilitation, and
judicial doctrine relating to the trial of criminal cases, which
dictate establishment of a school of criminal justice.
Thus, in authorizing the school, emphasis was given by the legislature
to needs in three areas: instruction, research, and leadership.
Similarly, the planning committee for the school, in its report to the
president of the university, recommended equally weighted essential
objectives of research, teaching, promotion, and outreach. The
committee reported these objectives as both urgent and appropriate:
1. Address research into all aspects of the criminal justice
system, both to increase our knowledge in general and to provide data
on which to base institutional change.
2. Produce
qualified teachers/scholars of criminal justice studies to staff
training and educational programs cre-ated throughout the state to
focus on criminal justice.
3. Train a pool of highly
educated personnel available for planning, policy determination, and
administrative positions within the criminal justice system.
4. Engage students through both academic studies and outreach programs in the criminal justice system.
5. Upgrade, educationally and professionally, practitioners now working within the criminal justice system.
6. Provide opportunities for improved training and education of entry-level personnel.
In addressing instructional needs, the committee emphasized the
education of qualified teachers/scholars in this field, as well as the
education of personnel for planning, policy determination, and
management of criminal justice. The committee recommended that the
instructional staff of the school concentrate on graduate education for
practitioners within the criminal justice system, or for other
individuals interested in focusing on criminal justice concerns, with
such instruction leading toward graduate degrees.
It
emphasized the need for a broad perspective on the interactions of the
elements comprising the criminal justice system and stressed an
integrative approach in the improvement of the functioning of the
criminal justice system.
In 1995, the school assumed
responsibility for undergraduate instruction in criminal justice on the
Newark campus. Compatible with the graduate program, the undergraduate
program`s emphasis is on providing undergraduates with a broad
educational foundation focused on issues of crime, deviance, law, and
justice. These students, too, are exposed to research, community
outreach, and criminal justice reform as part of their instructional
program.