I need help in these questions. Please answer the questions correcltly and make sure there is no plagiriasm,
Posted: Mon May 30, 2022 6:02 pm
I need help in these questions. Please answer the
questions correcltly and make sure there is no
plagiriasm,
After watching the film Just Mercy, respond to the questions below. NOTE: The longest responses should be for questions #3 and #5, because those questions require a response that touches on each stage of the system (policing/law enforcement, courts, and corrections). For all responses provide a thorough and thoughtful analysis, providing specific and detailed examples to support your points made. 1) Structural inequality/systemic racism is a key theme in this movie. Explain what Walter McMillian means when he tells Bryan Stevenson the following when they first meet: "You don't know what you're into down here in Alabama," he warns. "Here you're guilty from the moment you're born. 2) Bryan Stevenson tells District Attorney Tommy Chapman: "Well, it isn't my job to make people happy, it's to achieve justice for my client." What does "justice" mean to Stevenson in this moment and overall? How would he know he had achieved it for his client (McMillian as well as other clients)? 3) In which stages of the criminal justice system did race show up as explicitly relevant to decisions made (both the accused and their attorney)? 4) Why was Darnell Houston hesitant to provide a statement that would have discredited Meyers' testimony? Did his concerns play out? How so/how not? 5) Discuss the role of unethical decision making evident in the case against Walter McMillian as it pertains to EACH subsystem: law enforcement, the court system (lawyers, judges, juries, witnesses), and correctional staff.
questions correcltly and make sure there is no
plagiriasm,
After watching the film Just Mercy, respond to the questions below. NOTE: The longest responses should be for questions #3 and #5, because those questions require a response that touches on each stage of the system (policing/law enforcement, courts, and corrections). For all responses provide a thorough and thoughtful analysis, providing specific and detailed examples to support your points made. 1) Structural inequality/systemic racism is a key theme in this movie. Explain what Walter McMillian means when he tells Bryan Stevenson the following when they first meet: "You don't know what you're into down here in Alabama," he warns. "Here you're guilty from the moment you're born. 2) Bryan Stevenson tells District Attorney Tommy Chapman: "Well, it isn't my job to make people happy, it's to achieve justice for my client." What does "justice" mean to Stevenson in this moment and overall? How would he know he had achieved it for his client (McMillian as well as other clients)? 3) In which stages of the criminal justice system did race show up as explicitly relevant to decisions made (both the accused and their attorney)? 4) Why was Darnell Houston hesitant to provide a statement that would have discredited Meyers' testimony? Did his concerns play out? How so/how not? 5) Discuss the role of unethical decision making evident in the case against Walter McMillian as it pertains to EACH subsystem: law enforcement, the court system (lawyers, judges, juries, witnesses), and correctional staff.