A viable research project includes considerations of it being discipline-specific,
methodologically sound, appropriately focused, and aligned with the University’s
mission and values. Our department relies heavily on the Program Director of the
student’s program to determine whether the student’s topic meets the above
standards. Prospective committee members should also assist students in addressing
these concerns.
This research paper investigates the single most important alteration to the constitutional order of the United States, concentrating primarily on the Fourth Amendment and its application to the use of force as the primary topic of discussion. The main research topic related to the Fourth amendment and its application to the use of force how should the law address the use of body-worn cameras by police officers?
Bodycams were expected to be a tool to keep police officers legit and protect against police corruption however it’s contrary in some cases it has exposed the deeper issue that racism, police stereotyping, and lack of training and knowledge of civil rights are still secondary. Sometimes police officers feel that they are protected to violate the rights of citizens because it documents real time, so the authority slips into a power trip. Officers also feel that socially and economically some communities do not deserve the right to be policed lawfully. Many officers also feel that wearing body cameras takes away their ability to make decisions on when to arrest or when to let citizens go. Submit ROVER in Beacon to enroll in 885