2021-2022 Undergraduate Bulletin

International Criminal Justice, Dual Admission Accelerated Program

This dual admission / accelerated program leads to the Bachelor's degree in International Criminal Justice and the Master's degree in International Crime and Justice.  The program allows exceptional students to complete both degrees in a five year time period. To be eligible, students must have a GPA of 3.5 or higher and have completed 70-85 credits. These are the minimum requirements and do not guarantee acceptance into the program. Applicants must submit a personal statement, recommendations from three faculty members and a writing sample.  Interested students should contact the program coordinators below.

The BA in International Criminal Justice introduces students to the nature and cause of crime at the international level and to the mechanisms for its prevention and control. Components of the criminal justice system as they apply to transnational and international crime are studied, as well as the impact of international law and human rights in addressing crimes against humanity. The BA is intended to equip students with the knowledge and skills needed for careers in which the globalization of crime plays an important role. 

The MA in International Crime and Justice combines advanced substantive knowledge of international crime challenges and domestic and international responses, with analytic and research techniques in an interdisciplinary framework. It aims to produce graduates with a truly global outlook on criminal justice, a moral commitment to international justice, and professional competence in the increasingly multicultural workforce.

Learning Outcomes.  Students will:

  • Integrate interdisciplinary knowledge to explain the causes and consequences of international crime
  • Analyze and assess the workings of institutions, mechanisms and processes of international criminal justice, as well as related developments in law and policy worldwide. 
  • Critically analyze and apply research techniques in international crime and justice to the planning and execution of research projects. 
  • Develop the necessary multicultural communication skills to advance their arguments effectively in academic and professional settings in the United States and abroad. 

Credits Required.

International Criminal Justice, BA 30-39
General Education 42
Undergraduate Electives 17-26
International Crime & Justice MA  36
Total Credits Required for the Dual Admission
Accelerated Program (BA/MA Degree)
134

Undergraduate Coordinator. Professor Rosemary Barberet (212.237.8676, rbarberet@jjay.cuny.edu) Department of Sociology

Graduate Program Director. Professor Gohar Petrossian, Department of Criminal Justice (212-393-6409, gpetrossian@jjay.cuny.edu)

Undergraduate Foreign Language Requirement. Students who have expertise in other languages besides those available at John Jay College can explore taking the NYU Foreign Language Proficiency Exam or CLEP tests to demonstrate their language proficiency. Native speakers of a foreign language should see the Undergraduate Major Coordinator.  Students can also demonstrate their proficiency in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese and Spanish by taking a placement exam in the college's Modern Languages Center.

Tuition and Financial Aid Information.  This program is accelerated and intended for students to attend full-time (at least 12 cr. for undergraduate students, at least 9 cr. for graduate students).  Full-time students pay undergraduate tuition rates until they complete 120 credits and earn their bachelor’s degree.  Students are then graduate students and tuition is charged at the graduate rate.  Students who have not yet earned the Bachelor’s degree continue to be eligible for consideration of federal and state financial aid programs including PELL and TAP.  Once students move onto the Master’s portion of the program, undergraduate financial aid is not be applicable.  Students may apply for federal loans to finance their Master’s degree.

If circumstances occur that require students to attend part-time, tuition rates will be determined by the level of the courses (undergraduate or graduate) they are registered for.

All students in the accelerated, dual admission programs are encouraged to consult with the Financial Aid Office about their eligibility for aid under federal and state guidelines and the Bursar’s Office about tuition charges when they are considering admission to these programs. 

Additional information.  Students must have a 3.5 overall GPA each semester to remain in this dual admission accelerated program.  Students pay undergraduate tuition rates up to their 120 credit mark.  Subsequent coursework will be paid at the graduate tuition rate.  This accelerated program is intended to be done as a full-time student but if a student opts to attend part-time, the tuition rate appropriate to the level of course(s) will be charged. Students no longer eligible for this program or who wish to no longer be part of it, must complete the entire undergraduate major in order to earn the Bachelor's degree in International Criminal Justice.   

Foundational Courses

Required

ECO 101Introduction to Economics and Global Capitalism

3

or

ECO 120Introduction to Macroeconomics

3

or

ECO 125Introduction to Microeconomics

3

POL 101American Government & Politics

3

SOC 101Introduction to Sociology

3

Total Credit Hours:9

Mathematics

May be required depending on math placement
MAT 108Social Science Math

3

or

MAT 141Pre-Calculus

3

Total Credit Hours:0-3
Students who have taken higher level math, should see the Major Coordinator

Foreign Language

May be required depending on language placement
FLN 102 Beginning Level II Foreign Language

3

Total Credit Hours:0-3

Advisor recommendation
: POL 101 fulfills the Flexible Core: U.S. Experience in its Diversity area and SOC 101 fulfills the Flexible Core: Individual and Society area of the Gen Ed program. Depending on foreign language placement, students may have to take the 101-102 course sequence as prerequisites for the 200-level language requirement. For students that begin at John Jay as lower freshmen, the 101 (or 111) language course satisfies the Flexible Core: World Cultures and Global Issues category and the 102 (or 112) language course satisfies the College Option: Communications category of the Gen Ed program. MAT 108 or MAT 141 also fulfill the Required Core: Math and Quantitative Reasoning area depending on students’ placement scores.

Required BA Courses

Intermediate Language Skills

One 200-level foreign language course in any language other than English

Students who have prior knowledge of a foreign language can take a placement exam in the Modern Language Center, (212-484-1140, languagelab@jjay.cuny.edu) to place out of this language requirement. Placement tests are available in: Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese and Spanish. Please note: The FLN 201 courses are typically offered in the Fall semesters

Please note: SPA 207, SPA 308 and SPA 335 do NOT fulfill this language requirement. They are taught in English.

ICJ 101Introduction to International Criminal Justice

3

POL 259/LAW 259Comparative Criminal Justice Systems

3

STA 250Principles and Methods of Statistics

3

ICJ 310Foundations of Scholarship in International Criminal Justice

3

ICJ 401Capstone Seminar in International Criminal Justice

3

Total Credit Hours: 15-18

 

Foundation Courses

Select one

ECO 245International Economics

3

PAD 260International Public Administration

3

POL 257Comparative Politics

3

POL 260International Relations

3

Total Credit Hours: 3

Foundation Courses listed here align with Category B of the Foundations area in the ICJ BA program. Students use graduate courses in lieu of completing Categories A and C of the Foundations section of the BA in ICJ.  ICJ 700 replaces SOC 341 (Category C) and ICJ 715 counts in Category A replacing ANT 230 or POL 250.  ICJ 706 replaces ECO 231 in Part I. Core Courses of the BA in ICJ. 

Specialized Areas Electives

Students select two courses from the Specialized Areas of the ICJ BA major. Students must select one course from Category A and one course from Category B.

Category A. Global Perspectives on Crime

Select one

CJBA 367Wildlife Crime: Issues and Prevention

3

COR 303Comparative Correction Systems

3

ECO 260Environmental Economics, Regulation and Policy

3

ECO 327The Political Economy of Gender

3

ECO 333Sustainability: Preserving the Earth as Human Habitat

3

EJS 240Environmental Crime

3

EJS 300Environmental Justice

3

HIS 352History & Justice in Wider World

3

HIS 383History of Terrorism

3

ICJ 380Selected Topics in International Criminal Justice

3

POL 210Comparative Urban Political Systems

3

POL 246Politics of Global Inequality

3

POL 320International Human Rights

3

POL 322International Organizations

3

POL 325Transnational Crime

3

POL 328International Security

3

POL 362Terrorism and Politics

3

PSC 309Comparative Police Systems

3

PSC 312International Police Cooperation

3

PSC 415Seminar on Terrorism

3

SOC 251Sociology of Human Rights

3

SOC 275Political Imprisonment

3

SOC 333Gender Issues in International Criminal Justice

3

SOC 335Migration and Crime

3

SUS 240Environmental Crime

SUS 300Environmental Justice

Category B. Area/Regional Studies

Select one

AFR 210Drugs and Crime in Africa

3

AFR 220Law and Justice in Africa

3

AFR 229Restoring Justice: Making Peace and Resolving Conflict

3

AFR 320Perspectives on Justice in the Africana World

3

HIS 325Criminal Justice in European Society, 1750 to the Present

3

HIS 359History of Islamic Law

3

HIS 380The Secret Police in Western Society

3

LLS 220Human Rights and Law in Latin America

3

LLS 232/AFR 232Comparative Perspectives on Crime in the Caribbean

3

LLS 242/POL 242/HIS 242U.S. Foreign Policy in Latin America

3

LLS 250Drugs, Crime and Law in Latin America

3

LLS 356Terror and Transitional Justice in Latin America

3

LLS 401Seminar in Latinx Issues: Gender, Race, Ethnicity and the Legal System

3

POL 331Government and Politics in the Middle East and North Africa

3

PSC 250Criminal Justice in Eastern Europe

3

SOC 351Crime and Delinquency in Asia

3

SOC 354Gangs and Transnationalism

3

Total Credit Hours: 6

ICJ 702 replaces a Part IV, Category A or B free elective in this accelerated program.

Undergraduate Electives

Students must complete 17-26 credits of electives to fulfill the undergraduate portion of the degree program.  Students have free choice of electives for the additional credits.  Students may opt to complete a minor with their elective credits. 

Total Credit Hours: 17-26

International Crime and Justice MA Requirements

MA Core Courses

Required
ICJ 700International Crime and Justice Theory

3

ICJ 701Illegal Markets and Economic Justice

3

ICJ 702Comparative CRJ Systems

3

ICJ 703International Criminal Law

3

ICJ 704Crime, Justice, and Cultural Struggles

3

ICJ 706Transnational Crime

3

ICJ 715Applied Research Methods in International Crime and Justice

3

ICJ 770Capstone Course in International Crime and Justice

3

Total Credit Hours:24

MA Electives

Electives may be selected from the list below or from any of the graduate courses offered at John Jay and CUNY, subject to the approval of the graduate program director. Students may use their 12 elective credits to complete courses toward the Advanced Certificate in Transnational Organized Crime Studies or Terrorism Studies, or students can take a combination of different electives chosen from the list of approved electives below. 

Students who have completed 15 credits and have a GPA of 3.5 or above are eligible to take the following electives: Internship (6 credits) and Thesis I/Thesis II (6 credits). The thesis elective is taken over a two semester sequence as ICJ 791 and ICJ 792. The internship course (ICJ 780) is an online course that is accompanied by a mandatory 280 hours in an internship site. Placements in internship sites are arranged at the initiative of the student in consultation with the Center for Career and Professional Development and the program director. Students interested in the internship elective should start their search for an internship site at least one semester in advance. Students are encouraged to pursue one or more internships during their graduate studies, even if they are not taking the internship elective course, potentially as an Independent Study (3 credits).

ICJ 780Internship Course

6

ICJ 791International Crime and Justice Thesis I

3

ICJ 792International Crime and Justice Thesis II

3

ICJ 705Human Rights and Counterterrorism

3

ICJ 706Transnational Crime

3

ICJ 720Crime and Justice in the Balkans

ICJ 721International Perspectives on Women in Criminal Justice

3

ICJ 725Environmental Crime

3

ICJ 726Drug Trafficking

3

ICJ 730Human Trafficking

3

ICJ 750Special Topics in International Crime and Justice

3

ICJ 755Terrorism and Transnational Crime

3

ICJ 762Corruption and the Global Economy

3

CRJ 713White-Collar Crime

3

CRJ 727/FCM 727Cybercriminology

3

CRJ 739Crime Mapping

3

CRJ 744Terrorism and Politics

3

CRJ 746Terrorism and Apocalyptic Violence

3

CRJ 754/PAD 754Investigative Techniques

3

CRJ 759Comparative Police Administration

3

CRJ 789Violence Across the Globe

3

CRJ 797Homeland Security and International Relations

3

CRJ 798Homeland Security and Terrorism

3

HR 701International Human Rights: Organizations and Institutions

3

HR 711Human Rights and Humanitarianism

3

HR 712Civil and Political Rights and Civil Liberties

3

HR 713Economic, Social and Cultural Rights

3

PAD 718International Public Policy and Administration

3

PAD 746Comparative Public Administration

3

PAD 772International Inspection and Oversight

3

PSY 705Victimology

3

PSY 729Terrorism

3

PSY 746Empirical Profiling Methods

3

Total Credit Hours:12

Total Credit Hours: 134