| dc.description.abstract | The criminal justice system of Bangladesh is founded on a robust constitutional and
statutory framework, yet it faces significant challenges in procedural efficiency,
institutional functioning, and rights protection. This monograph examines the doctrinal
foundations of criminal law, analyzes the institutional architecture including police,
prosecution, judiciary, and correctional institutions, and conducts a comparative study
with selected jurisdictions: India, United Kingdom, United States, Pakistan, and the
United Arab Emirates.
Methodologically, the study employs a doctrinal and comparative approach, analyzing
statutes, constitutional provisions, case law, and secondary sources such as scholarly
articles, human rights reports, and institutional studies. The research identifies critical
gaps in implementation, including politicization of law enforcement, lack of
prosecution autonomy, judicial delays, prison overcrowding, and inadequate procedural
safeguards. Comparative insights reveal effective models for prosecution
independence, fast-track and specialized courts, digital case management, and rights
based reforms.
The study concludes that reforming Bangladesh’s criminal justice system requires
legislative modernization, institutional restructuring, technological integration, and
human rights compliance. Recommendations include establishing an autonomous
prosecution agency, professionalizing police, enhancing judicial efficiency through
case management and specialized courts, implementing rehabilitation-focused prison
programs, and ensuring constitutional and procedural safeguards are effectively
enforced.
This monograph contributes to the literature by providing an integrated, research-heavy
analysis and a reform-oriented roadmap, emphasizing both doctrinal and practical
dimensions of criminal justice administration in Bangladesh. | en_US |