TY - JOUR
T1 - Pathologising the victim
T2 - Law and the construction of people with disabilities as victims of crime in Ireland
AU - Edwards, Claire
PY - 2014/5
Y1 - 2014/5
N2 - Victimologists have for many years explored the construction of identities associated with the 'victim of crime', and how certain groups in society are understood as more 'deserving' of victim status than others. This paper considers the victim subjectivities ascribed to people with disabilities11 In Ireland, 'people with disabilities' is the preferred term to 'disabled people'. as victims of crime in Ireland by exploring the legal frameworks that shape their encounters with the criminal justice system. The legislative bricolage that exists is shaped by disjuncture, whereby anti-discrimination measures grounded in people with disabilities' equal rights to access the justice system sit alongside those that construct them in terms of incapacity. Criminal law overwhelmingly pathologises people with disabilities as crime victims, with impairment dominating their victim status. The paper suggests that notions of victimhood that associate people with disabilities with dependency and passivity will do little to raise awareness of the disabling barriers that characterise their encounters with the criminal justice system.
AB - Victimologists have for many years explored the construction of identities associated with the 'victim of crime', and how certain groups in society are understood as more 'deserving' of victim status than others. This paper considers the victim subjectivities ascribed to people with disabilities11 In Ireland, 'people with disabilities' is the preferred term to 'disabled people'. as victims of crime in Ireland by exploring the legal frameworks that shape their encounters with the criminal justice system. The legislative bricolage that exists is shaped by disjuncture, whereby anti-discrimination measures grounded in people with disabilities' equal rights to access the justice system sit alongside those that construct them in terms of incapacity. Criminal law overwhelmingly pathologises people with disabilities as crime victims, with impairment dominating their victim status. The paper suggests that notions of victimhood that associate people with disabilities with dependency and passivity will do little to raise awareness of the disabling barriers that characterise their encounters with the criminal justice system.
KW - crime victims
KW - criminal justice system
KW - Ireland
KW - law
KW - people with disabilities
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84900819865
U2 - 10.1080/09687599.2013.844099
DO - 10.1080/09687599.2013.844099
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84900819865
SN - 0968-7599
VL - 29
SP - 685
EP - 698
JO - Disability and Society
JF - Disability and Society
IS - 5
ER -