Glenn Hastedt, Chair Daisy Breneman, Academic Advisor JUSTICE is a concept that encompasses the principles of fairness, equity, and right action. Justice is necessary for sustaining and promoting the growth and development of individuals and communities politically, economically, and socially. • Liberal Arts program • Social sciences and the humanities • Interdisciplinary • Looking at “puzzles”: rigorous analysis • Policy focused • Students develop a personal definition of justice • A Criminal Justice Major • Criminal Justice Minor at JMU, pre-professional focus • CRJU programs : applied problems to be solved • JUST views justice issues as a general class of social and political problems to be understood; looks at puzzles that have multiple answers depending on perspective • Pre Law School Major • JMU offers Pre-law as a pre-professional program; students select major from a wide range of fields • Core Requirements: • Track Requirements • Track A: Crime and Criminology • Track B: Global Justice and Policy • Track C: Social Justice • Senior Seminar • • • • First semester: JUST 200 Second Semester: Track Foundation Courses Third Semester and Beyond: Upper Level Track Courses Last Two Semesters: Research Methods and Senior Seminar • • • • Fairness Standards Rights Responsibilities • Focus is on the nature, causes and solutions for crime • Provide an understanding of those behaviors that we have defined as criminal or deviant and how we respond to them • Primarily focused on U.S. at the national level • Explores issues of justice in global context; questions of security, equity and equality • Topics covered include international law, national security, war & peace, cross cultural relations, democratization, environmental protection, conflict resolution and human rights • Designed to investigate what is fair, equitable and just • Deals with oppression and liberation of vulnerable, exploited and marginalized populations; problems such as poverty, discrimination, environmental destruction • Promotes sustainable and just solutions to social, political and economic problems. • Washington Semester • JMU housing • Fall for Track A or C; Spring for B or C • Internships • Detailed information on the Justice Studies website • Most do them in the summer • Students get their own internships • Study Abroad • See Office of International Programs • Track A: local, state, federal law enforcement (police, Homeland Security, Secret Service, FBI,) Law • Track B: federal law enforcement, peace corps, international aid agencies, NGOs • Track C: mediation organizations, human services, overseas development organizations • *But these aren’t the only possibilities • Liberal Arts degree program • Not preparing for a specific job • Knowledge & critical thinking skills • Learn (how) to learn • Think about academic and career goals, and what you want your college experience to be • Explore, learn more, use resources • Where and what feels right • What am I going to give back? • Engaged University