At the end of the nineteenth century, the law and order of dark green smoke drifted in the air and dirt was flowing through the street. London was not a suitable place to live in the 19th century. Robbery, alcoholism and strikes are just a few of the crimes. Women got a rough deal, and they did not work, so many women turned into prostitution and alcoholism. But surprisingly, the rate of violent death is very low, there are about 15 murders per year and 50 massacre cases per year.
Mark Twain called the end of the 19th century the "golden age". Through this, he meant that this period was shining on the surface but was damaged down. In the popular opinion, the latter half of the 19th century was a greedy and jealous era. The baroness of greedy thieves, sneaky speculators and corporate pirates, dark business practices, politics on scandal, vulgarity. As an era of corruption, conspicuous consumption, and free capitalism it is easy to saturate the golden era. However, when the agricultural society of smallholder farmers changes into urban society dominated by industrial enterprises, it is more useful to regard this as an era of contemporary American formation.
From the mid-nineteenth century to the end of the nineteenth century in the United States, the justice system evolved using established laws, regulations, and practices. The law of Jim Crow established a way to reconcile past slavery. The country has become highly dependent on criminal justice procedures. Today, more than 6 million people are taking corrective action including imprisonment for crime such as trivial theft, drug abuse, murder. Today's "drug war" leads to imprisonment for teenagers and adults. Criminal justice experts argue that imprisonment does not change the behavior of drugs. Today, citizens and criminal justice experts are considering the benefits of the criminal justice system which does not include punitive elements for certain types of crimes.
International humanitarian law began to appear in the late nineteenth century and expanded to accept treaty laws on various customary laws and war acts. Implementation of these rules is left to the state, the state almost ignores these rules. After the end of the Second World War, the United States and its allies decided to submit their captured enemies to "legal judgment". And Jackson's prosecutor general called "one of the most important contributions of power." The Nuremberg court reflects the belief that "... those who committed a crime must not avoid his crime as a theory of national order and avoid his sins". . Personal criminal