TY - CHAP
T1 - Victims and Victimology
AU - Windle, James
AU - Lynch, Orla
AU - Sweeney, Kevin
AU - O’Neill, Maggie
AU - Donson, Fiona
AU - Cuffe, James
PY - 2022/8
Y1 - 2022/8
N2 - www.pearson-books.com This book provides an introduction to key debates in the field of victims and victimology. Emergent and established themes in victim-centred research, policy and practice are outlined and illustrated with detailed case studies of important developments; including, for example, repeat victimisation, victim compensation, and probation-based victim contact work. While the mainstay of the text focuses on victim-centred criminal and social justice developments in England and Wales, examples are offered from around the world in an effort to explore the victim's 'place' in the context of wider political and policy debates. The book's eight chapters, together with its introduction and end comment, describe and comment on some of the most salient developments, in recent years, in so-called 'victim-centred' justice. KEY FEATURES: • reviews our current understanding of 'who' the victim is and criminal justice responses to victimisation • examines the interplay and conflict between academic victimology and victim advocacy • discusses the needs and rights of the victim and their impact on defendants' rights • provides coverage of different criminal justice models purporting to be 'victim-centred', including restorative justice, one of the most hotly debated criminal justice developments in recent years • explores neglected and emergent themes in victim-centred research, such as trafficking in women for sexual exploitation and white collar crime. Victims and Victimology is suitable for courses at both undergraduate and postgraduate level.
AB - www.pearson-books.com This book provides an introduction to key debates in the field of victims and victimology. Emergent and established themes in victim-centred research, policy and practice are outlined and illustrated with detailed case studies of important developments; including, for example, repeat victimisation, victim compensation, and probation-based victim contact work. While the mainstay of the text focuses on victim-centred criminal and social justice developments in England and Wales, examples are offered from around the world in an effort to explore the victim's 'place' in the context of wider political and policy debates. The book's eight chapters, together with its introduction and end comment, describe and comment on some of the most salient developments, in recent years, in so-called 'victim-centred' justice. KEY FEATURES: • reviews our current understanding of 'who' the victim is and criminal justice responses to victimisation • examines the interplay and conflict between academic victimology and victim advocacy • discusses the needs and rights of the victim and their impact on defendants' rights • provides coverage of different criminal justice models purporting to be 'victim-centred', including restorative justice, one of the most hotly debated criminal justice developments in recent years • explores neglected and emergent themes in victim-centred research, such as trafficking in women for sexual exploitation and white collar crime. Victims and Victimology is suitable for courses at both undergraduate and postgraduate level.
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/391bd5bb-4aa1-3f93-af23-6f7bc474132f/
U2 - 10.4324/9781003044284-23
DO - 10.4324/9781003044284-23
M3 - Chapter
T3 - Criminology, Crime and Justice in Ireland
SP - 211
EP - 227
BT - Criminology, Crime and Justice in Ireland
PB - Routledge
ER -