Victims and the Criminal Justice System. CRIM102 Lancaster

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Victims and the Criminal Justice System

 

  • Victimological perspectives

  • Researching victims

  • Extent of victimisation

  • Public policy

 

Victimological perspectives

  • Positivist Victimology

    • Focused on

      • Victim precipitation

      • Victim proneness

        • Some people are more at risk than others

          • Similar to how some groups are more likely to be criminals

      • Victim culpability

      • Victim blaming

        • How are victims to blame for being a victim?

        • What is an ideal victim?

          • Vulnerable

          • Defenceless

          • Innocent

          • Worthy of sympathy

    • A lot of victimisation is hidden

    • Hierarchy of victimisation

      • Children near the top

      • Gang members near the bottom

        • Exists even though those near the bottom are often the most at risk

  • Radical victimology

    • Associated with the feminist movement

    • Need to face up to the reality of crime from a social democratic perspective

    • Criminal victimisation has two elements

      • Geographically and socially focused on the most vulnerable aspect of society

      • Impact of victimisation is a product of risk rates and vulnerability

    • Does not deny the impacts of capitalism

      • Most crime happens to the poor

    • Wish to contextualise victimisation within the socioeconomic and political framework

      • Has mirrored several aspects of positivist victimology

        • Criticised for this

  • Critical Victimology

    • Need for the development of an empirically based victim science

      • Do victims of crime have needs/rights?

      • Question of citizenship

      • Roles of the state

  • Feminist Victimology

    • Examines the gendered dimensions of victimisation

      • Domestic and Sexual Violence

        • Led to the introduction of support systems for ‘surviors’

          • Rejection of the term victim

        • Attempts to make violence against women seem unusual rather than normative

      • Responding to domestic violence

        • Advocate 0 tolerance policing

          • Challenge police perceptions about domestic violence policing

        • Domestic violence as a social issue as well as a criminal issue

      • Responding to sexual violence

        • Creation of **** crisis centres

        • Only 16% of victims report

          • Due to fear of being blamed

          • 26% of people think the victim will be blamed

        • Desire to tackle secondary victimisation

      • Responses to disability hate crime

        • Police are not trained to deal with certain disabilities

          • Usually dealt with outside of the CJS

            • Lack of victim support due to this

  • Male victims

    • Victims of hegemonic masculinity

    • Female victimisers

  • Many different aspects of victimisation

    • Class

    • Ethnicity

    • Age

    • Gender

    • Sexual orientation

      • These aspects are also risks for offending

 

Researching victims

  • What is a victim?

    • A person who has come to some form of harm due to the actions of another

  • How much are crime and victimisation measured?

  • How much victimisation is there?

    • Not just amount that is important

      • Extent and impact important too

  • Who and what is victimised?

    • Not all victims are obviously victims

      • Hidden victimisation

        • Need to be answered to tackle the issue of victimisation

          • (Walklate, 2012)

      • Can use crime survey data to do this

      • Aims of crime surveys:

        • Level of victimisation

          • How many victims are there?

          • Is the rate of victimisation increasing?

        • Correlates of victimisation

          • Who are typical victims?

            • Poor people are systematically penalised for just being poor

              • Victims of the process and society

          • How is victimisation distributed?

        • Dynamics of victimisation

          • What is the relationship between the victim and offender?

          • Do victims resist victimisation?

          • What about

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