首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
For the past six years, crime rates have been falling all over America. In some big cities, the fall has been extraordinary. Bet
For the past six years, crime rates have been falling all over America. In some big cities, the fall has been extraordinary. Bet
admin
2009-06-24
23
问题
For the past six years, crime rates have been falling all over America. In some big cities, the fall has been extraordinary. Between 1994 and 1997 in New York city violent crime fell by 39% in central Harlem and by 45% in the once-terrifying South Bronx. The latest figures released by the FBI, for 1997, show that serious crime continued to fall in all the largest cities, though a little more slowly than in 1996.
Violent crime fell by 5% in all, and by slightly more in cities with over 250,000 people. Property crimes have fallen, too, by more than 20% since 1980, so that the rates for burglary and car-theft are lower in America than they are in supposedly more law-abiding Britain and Scandinavia. And people have noticed. In 1994, 30% of Americans told pollsters that crime was the most important challenge facing the country. In 1997, only 15% thought so. Some cities’ police departments are so impressed by these figures, it is said, that they have lately taken to exaggerating the plunge in crime.
Why this has happened is anyone’s guess. Many factors—social, demographic, economic, and political—affect crime rate, so it is difficult to put a finger on the vital clue. In May this year, the FBI itself admitted it had "no idea" why rates were falling so fast.
Politicians think they know, of course. Ask Rudy Giuliani, the mayor of New York, why his city has made such strides in beating crime that it accounts for fully a quarter of the national decline. He will cite his policy of "zero tolerance". This concept, which sprang from a famous article by two criminologists in Atlantic Monthly in March 1982, maintains that by refusing to tolerate tiny infractions of the law—dropping litter, spray-painting walls—the authorities can create a climate in which crime of more dangerous kinds finds it impossible to flourish. The Atlantic article was called "Broken Windows"; if one window in a building was left broken, it argued, all the others would soon be gone. The answer: mend the window, fast.
The metro system in Washington D.C., was the first place where zero tolerance drew public attention, especially when one passenger was arrested for eating a banana. The policy seemed absurdly pernickety, yet it worked: in a better environment, people’s behavior improved, and crime dropped. Mr. Giuliani, taking this theme to heart, has gone further. He has cracked down on windscreen-cleaners, public urinators graffiti, and even jaywalkers. He has excoriated New York’s famously sullen cabdrivers, and wants all New Yorkers to be nicer to each other. Tony Blair, visiting from London, has been hugely impressed.
But is this cleanliness and civility the main reason why crime has fallen? It seems unlikely. "Zero tolerance" can also be a distraction, making too many policemen spend too much time handing out littering tickets and parking fines while, some streets away, young men are being murdered for their trainers. It is localized, too: though lower Manhattan or the Washington metro can show the uncanny orderliness of a communist regime, other parts of the city—the areas of highest crime maybe left largely untreated.
William Bratton, New York’s police commissioner until Mr. Giuliani fired him for stealing his thunder, has a different explanation for the fall in crime. It came about mainly, he believes, because he reorganized the police department and restored its morale: giving his officers better guns, letting them take more decisions for themselves, and moving them away from desk jobs and out into the streets. Mr. Bratton made his precinct commanders personally responsible for reducing crimes on their own beats. There was no passing the buck, and those who failed were fired. Within a year, he had replaced half of them.
选项
A、Its crime rates have been falling only in big cities.
B、Violent crime falls by 39%.
C、The rates for burglary and car-theft are lower in America than that in Britain.
D、Violent crime falls by more than 20%.
答案
C
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/9ESsFFFM
本试题收录于:
公共英语五级笔试题库公共英语(PETS)分类
0
公共英语五级笔试
公共英语(PETS)
相关试题推荐
PublicRelationsPublicrelationsisabroadsetofplannedcommunicationsaboutthecompany,includingpublicityreleases,
PreservingNatureforFutureDemandsforstrongerprotectionforwildlifeinBritainsometimeshidethefactthatsimilarne
MedicineAwardKicksoffNobelPrizeAnnouncementsTwoscientistswhohavewonpraiseforresearchintothegrowthofcancer
A.PreparationfortakingacitizenshiptestB.CitizenshiptestsinEuropeancountriesC.ImportanceofpromotingintegrationD
Thebookprovidesaconciseanalysisofthecountry’shistory.
Heissaidtobesufferingfromterminalcancerandhasaskedforeuthanasia(安乐死).
TheOldGateIntheMiddleAgesthevastmajorityofEuropeancitieshadwallsaroundthem.Thiswaspartlyfordefensive【C1
Whatis"busbunching"?
WhatcanbecitedtoshowMr.Eliasson’sunderstandingoftotal-immersionart?
随机试题
用硫酸亚铁法测定食盐中的亚铁氰化钾,在酸性条件下,亚铁氰化钾与()反应,生成白色亚铁氰化亚铁沉淀,在空气中氧化成普鲁士蓝,用分光光度法测定。
在Excel2010中,比较运算符的运算结果是True或False。()
女性,30岁。1个月来无明显原因出现口、眼干燥,半个月来出现四肢关节疼痛,以双侧肘、膝关节明显,一直未诊治。近几天进固体食物时常须用水冲服,无多饮、多尿,大便正常。既往体健。查体:T36.8℃,BP120/80mmHg,舌面干,口腔异味大,心肺腹检查未
A、理气B、凉血C、散瘀止血D、益气养阴E、补血活血参松养心胶囊除活血通络外,又能()。
对有营业收入的非经营性项目进行财务分析时,应以营业收入抵补下列支出:①生产经营耗费;②偿还借款利息;③缴纳流转税;④计提折旧和偿还借款本金,正常的收入补偿顺序是()。
支票的提示付款期限为自出票日起1个月。()
注册会计师可能建议被审计单位管理层调整以下()错报事项。
不属于健康领域教学活动的环境创设内容的一项是()
在现代社会中,道德能帮助人们认识个人与社会,个人与他人以及个人与自然之间的关系,从而促使人们正确的选择自己的行为和生活道路,这是道德的()功能。
对于同一棵大树,在木匠的眼中是木材,在画家眼中是色彩,在植物学家眼中是它的种属,这是因为()。
最新回复
(
0
)