Page 15 - Forensic News Journal Oct Nov 2017
P. 15

Criminal Profiling for PR in China

        of the show rather than project real life.



        Conclusion:



 F      Criminal profiling in China is a distant idea right now - the necessary backgrounds,

 O      education, experts and science are just not available in the education system or the
 R      wider society. The police are too unsophisticated and untrained to be able to handle
 E      real investigations. If it is not obvious - then forget it. Corruption within China is

 N      still wholesale in all aspects of life and so paying off the system still happens if you
 S      are rich enough and the authorities are underpaid and under-educated and so an easy

 I      mark for taking money and turning a blind eye to crime.
 C
        As China modernizes in its cities and lifestyles, so more crime from the area of

 M      those without and those with wealth will continue. The gap now between the middle
 E      classes and the rural poor is getting wider every day and so creating the right condi-

 T      tions for crime where material gain is the most important thing. In China everyone
 H      seeks money as a God and empathy for others is non-existent. Perfect society in
 O      which to breed major crimes against the person such as the serial killer.

 D
 O      Dr. Stephen Myler is from Leicester in England, an industrial town in the Midlands

 L      of the United Kingdom. He holds a B.Sc. (Honors) in Psychology from the UKAs
 O      Open University the largest in the UK; he also has an M.Sc. and Ph.D. in
 G      Psychology from Knightsbridge University in Denmark. In addition to this Stephen

 Y      holds many diplomas and awards in a variety of academic areas including
        journalism, finance, teaching and advanced therapy for mental health. Stephen has
        as a Professor of Psychology many years teaching experience in colleges and uni-

        versities in England and China to post 16 young adults, instructing in psychology,
        sociology, English, marketing and business. He has been fortunate to travel exten-
        sively from Australia to Africa to the United Sates, South America, Borneo, most

        of Europe and Russia. Stephen's favorite hobby is the study of primates and likes to
        play badminton. He believes that students who enjoy classes with humor and enthu-

        siasm from the teacher always come back eager to learn more.











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