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Just an ‘optional extra’ in the ‘victim toolkit’?: The culture, mechanisms and approaches of criminal justice organisations delivering restorative justice in England and Wales International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2022-03-19 Rebecca Banwell-Moore
Despite policy and guidance stating that all victims of crime should have ‘equal access’ to restorative justice in England and Wales, victim participation remains low. Here, the ways in which criminal justice agents – responsible for providing victim services, including restorative justice – offer restorative justice to victims are explored. Drawing upon empirical data collected from criminal justice
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Theorising victim decision making in the police response to domestic abuse International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2022-03-15 Nathan Birdsall, Laura Boulton
The paper provides a conceptual argument for the importance of understanding victim decision making in responding to cases of domestic abuse. It applies core elements of decision-making theory to illustrate how victims may undergo different forms of thinking, could be affected by bias, consider gain and loss differently, and suffer from decision inertia. Suggestions are provided on how this perspective
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Patriarchy, political enmity, and domestic violence: Exploring abusive mixed intimate partnerships in a conflict zone International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2022-03-15 Edna Erez, Revital Sela-Shayovitz, Peter R Ibarra
Mixed couples face more marital conflict than endogamous couples. Drawing on intersectional theory and narrative victimology, this study examines women’s accounts of abuse in mixed heterosexual Arab/Palestinian–Israeli Jewish intimate partnerships amid the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. The narratives of 25 women formerly in an abusive relationship are the primary data, which are supplemented by a comprehensive
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Apology–forgiveness cycle in restorative justice, but how? International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2022-03-15 Masahiro Suzuki, Tamera Jenkins
The apology–forgiveness cycle is a simple but powerful process for conflict resolution. Given the prevalence of apology and forgiveness in restorative justice (RJ), the apology–forgiveness cycle may take place. However, there is a lack of theoretical understanding of the relationship between apology and forgiveness in the RJ processes. After identifying key elements and impediments of the apology–forgiveness
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The impact of crime on tourists and the need for greater support for tourist victims International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2022-03-15 M Ozascilar, RI Mawby
This article presents the first research to address the impact of crime on citizens who suffer crime during a vacation. Based on a small sample of US residents victimised while visiting five different countries, and drawn from a crowdsourcing platform, it is, essentially exploratory. However, the findings suggest that tourist victims are severely affected by their experiences and that this impacts
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The nature and extent of sexual assault in the sky: Shining a light on a ‘black box’ International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2022-03-13 Christina Mancini, Kristen M Budd, Bailey M Brown, Sami Hausserman, Sydney Smith
Strikingly, federal data sources tracking the nature and extent of sexual assaults that occur aboard airlines are incomplete and typically not released to the public. In order to better understand this relatively hidden social phenomenon, we conducted a content analysis of media reports published over approximately a 20-year period (2000–2020). Within these media reports, we analyzed the incident characteristics
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Long-term partners – Reflections on the shifts in partnership responses to domestic violence International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2022-03-07 Kirsty Welsh
Whilst pioneering partnership work first took place in the battered women’s or refuge movement in England and Wales, the response that came to dominate in the 1990s and 2000s mirrored that associated with crime prevention more generally and Home Office crime prevention in particular. This reflected the increasing positioning of domestic violence as ‘real crime’ and the moves at this time to view domestic
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Do structural choice theory and the ‘risky lifestyles’ perspectives predict immunity as well as victimization? A test using zero-inflated mixed-effect SEM analyses of adolescent victimizations in South Korea International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2022-03-02 Melissa Rorie, Seong-min Park, Matthew P West
Adolescent victimization experiences can cause serious distress to victims and have been shown to be international phenomena. While victimization in various forms tends to peak in adolescence, its trajectories vary depending on individual and structural characteristics as well as the type of offending. Using structural choice theory and the ‘risky lifestyles’ perspective as our framework, the present
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An examination of the interrelationship between disordered gambling and intimate partner violence International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2022-01-18 James Banks, Jaime Waters
In response to the liberalisation and deregulation of gambling across much of the Western world, academics continue to examine gambling-related harms that result from the increased availability of gambling products and services. This paper explores the interrelationship between disordered gambling and intimate partner violence. Qualitative data were derived from interviews with 26 female research participants
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Filling in the (gendered) gaps: How observers frame claims of sexual assault International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2021-12-21 Eva Mulder, Alice Kirsten Bosma
Claims of sexual assault are especially prone to scrutiny and (re)interpretation as something else. We investigated how people judged the veracity of sexual assault claims and how they subsequently framed their interpretations of these claims using ‘general knowledge’ in the form of sexual scripts, rape myths, and gender stereotypes. Participants (n = 161) read about a sexual assault allegation by
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Bosnian voices from the bottom of the well: Genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity and victims’ right to remedies International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2021-11-07 Alma Begicevic
Human rights advocates call for reparation as an important step to acknowledge and repair historical injustice and mass harms. In Bosnia and Herzegovina, victims of war continue to seek monetary reparation for non-pecuniary damages caused by genocide: murder, injury to human body and dignity, and harms inflicted upon a close family member. They seek legal remedies using national, foreign, and international
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Compensatory justice to the victim of a crime and judicial practices in India: An empirical study International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2021-11-07 Madhuker Sharma
The Constitution of India guarantees that justice shall be delivered to all. The duty to ensure that justice delivery is accessible to all is entrusted to state bodies. The legislature is expected to ensure that the legal framework is there, the executive is expected to ensure that all infrastructural needs of the justice delivery system are in place, and the judiciary is expected to ensure that justice
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Adult male victims of female-perpetrated sexual violence: Australian social media responses, myths and flipped expectations International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2021-10-28 April Loxton, Andrew Groves
In the era of #metoo, conversations regarding rape and sexual violence have received increased attention in mainstream media, giving voice to some of the many victims impacted by sexual assault. Despite the significant social upheaval this movement has given credence to, male victims of female-perpetrated sexual assault remain largely absent from Australian media. Adherence to strict representations
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Victimology and judicialized public policies. A study on complex victims of the Colombian armed conflict International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2021-09-19 Cristina Montalvo Velásquez, Luis Trejos Rosero, Ángel Tuirán Sarmiento
This article identifies victimological typologies typical of the Colombian internal armed conflict, which denote the double condition of victim–victims or vice versa victims–victimized. These have been classed throughout this research as ‘complex victims’, whose historical existence was unveiled from precursor victimology, which is used in the final part of the text to demonstrate that the exclusion
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Critical hate studies: A new perspective International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2021-08-27 Zoë James, Katie McBride
This paper sets out a critical perspective that cohesively explains why hate happens in late modernity and its impact on the lived experience of victims. The paper challenges existing theoretical accounts of hate by presenting a psycho-social approach to subjectivity that acknowledges the impact of neoliberal capitalism on the lived experience. By doing so, the paper is able to account for the extremities
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Drizzling sympathy: Ideal victims and flows of sympathy in Swedish courts International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2021-08-18 Nina Törnqvist
By connecting sociological perspectives on sympathy with the concept of ‘ideal victims’, this article examines how sympathy forms and informs legal thought and practices in relation to victim status in Swedish courts. In its broadest sense, sympathy can be understood as an understanding and care for someone else’s suffering and in many contexts victimization and sympathy are densely entangled. However
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The debt trap, a shadow pandemic for commercial sex workers: Vulnerability, impact, and action International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2021-08-17 Beulah Shekhar
This research paper is a stringent analysis of the condition of commercial sex workers in India and what is happening to them in this pandemic-stricken time. The study details their economic condition and what is forcing them to borrow money from treacherous lenders despite knowing the risks behind it. Apart from being exploited financially, they are also becoming vulnerable for sexual, emotional,
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Violent victimisation in Lagos metropolis: An empirical investigation of community and personal predictors International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2021-07-14 Waziri B Adisa, Tunde A Alabi, Johnson Ayodele, Franca Attoh, Samuel O Adejoh
Violence or its threats have been a part of many African cities since the end of the Cold War, when many African countries transited from military to civilian rule. While the incidence of organised crime and violent victimisation of innocent citizens is not new to many West African cities, the emergence of terrorist organisations, armed bandits, kidnappers and armed gangs in a city like Lagos has created
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Judging extreme forgivers: How victims are perceived when they forgive the unforgivable International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2021-07-13 Judy Eaton, Jenniffer Olenewa, Cole Norton
When one individual commits a transgression or aggressive act against another, third parties often have expectations about how the victim should respond, even when they do not have any personal involvement in the event. When their justice expectations are violated, such as when a victim forgives the offender for an act that third parties deem too heinous to forgive, third parties may react in a way
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Double, triple or quadruple hits? Exploring the impact of cybercrime on victims in the Netherlands International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2021-06-21 Raoul Notté, E.R. Leukfeldt, Marijke Malsch
This article explores the impact of online crime victimisation. A literature review and 41 interviews – 19 with victims and 22 with experts – were carried out to gain insight into this. The interviews show that most impacts of online offences correspond to the impacts of traditional offline offences. There are also differences with offline crime victimisation. Several forms of impact seem to be specific
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Nonresponse bias when estimating victimization rates: A nonresponse analysis using latent class analysis International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2021-06-15 Nathalie Leitgöb-Guzy
The study expands empirical knowledge on nonresponse bias when estimating victimization rates by using latent class analysis (LCA). Based on information about proxy-nonrespondents (hard-to-reach respondents and soft refusals), the study identifies subgroup(s) of persons who are systematically underrepresented by refusal and unreachability and determines whether an over- or underestimation of different
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Long-term (re)integration of persons trafficked for the purpose of sexual exploitation International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2021-06-07 Biljana Meshkovska, Arjan E.R. Bos, Melissa Siegel
This paper focuses on the recovery and (re)integration processes of women victims of trafficking for the purpose of sexual exploitation in Europe. It looks at their life not just following a trafficking experience, but for several years afterwards, answering the questions: Are some factors more important than others, in the short and long run? What are the overall dynamics of the (re)integration process
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Storied experiences of the Havelock North drinking water crisis: A case for a ‘narrative green victimology’ International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2021-04-23 Sarah Monod de Froideville
The number of victims from environmental harm far exceeds that from everyday property and interpersonal crime, yet little is known about the experience of environmental victimisation. This paper makes a case for a narrative green victimology to advance scholarship about environmental victims, drawing on data from interviews with persons affected by a waterborne outbreak of campylobacter in the small
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‘Antisemitism is just part of my day-to-day life’: Coping mechanisms adopted by Orthodox Jews in North London International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2021-04-22 Maya Flax
This paper analyses the coping mechanisms which Orthodox Jews in North London have adopted in managing antisemitism. The study, which was informed by a sociological framework, employed a qualitative approach using 28 semi-structured interviews and five focus groups. The findings reveal that despite the high frequency of the victimisation, and despite the awareness among respondents that antisemitism
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The ideal victim: A critical race theory (CRT) approach International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2021-03-09 Lisa J Long
Using a critical race theory (CRT) framework, this paper analyses Black and Black mixed- race people’s experiences of reporting crime. It is based on qualitative interviews with 20 participants. The analysis finds that the process of becoming the (un)victim is mediated through the intersection of race with gender and masculinity, class and migrant status. Ultimately, Black and Black mixed-race men
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Climate change and victimization risk: A disaggregated look at NCVS data International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2021-03-03 Ekaterina Gorislavsky, Dennis Mares
The current study uses pooled National Crime Victimization Survey data (1992–2015) to examine if the relationship between climate change and victimization risk is modified by victim and incident characteristics. Panel analysis yields interesting findings. First, results mirror those found in prior studies utilizing Uniform Crime Report data, providing another indication that the link between a warming
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Counting crime: Discounting victims? International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2021-03-03 Matthew Hall
This paper sets out to critically explore the connections drawn by Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services between police adherence to national crime recording standards and the provision of service and support by the police to victims of crime. The goal of the paper is to identify what assumptions are being made by Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire &
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‘Not bullet proof’: The complex choice not to seek a civil protection order for intimate partner violence International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2021-02-18 Jill Theresa Messing, Meredith E Bagwell-Gray, Allison Ward-Lasher, Alesha Durfee
Protection orders (POs) are one legal system resource available to survivors of intimate partner violence. Many survivors choose not to obtain a PO, yet prior research has not examined the perspectives of these survivors. This study examined the open-ended survey responses (n = 308) regarding the choice not to obtain a PO by survivors residing in emergency shelters in the United States. Content analysis
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The application of routine activity theory in explaining victimization of child marriage International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2021-02-03 Michael L. Valan, Murugesan Srinivasan
The present research is an attempt to explain the problem of child marriage in light of routine activity theory, developed by Felson and Cohen in 1979. There is, however, no specific theory that exclusively addresses either children as victims of crime in general or victims of child marriage in particular. Unlike other crime victims, however, certain victims of child marriage do not view themselves
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Claiming justice: Victims of crime and their perspectives of justice International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2021-01-29 Robyn L. Holder, Amanda L. Robinson
‘Victims claiming justice’ has surface simplicity but arises in a range of contexts influenced by different histories, facing different institutions offering different possibilities. It is this tremendous range of contexts and characteristics that has engaged researchers. Most have taken the idea of justice as a given. As guest editors of this symposium on justice, we sought to delve into deeper and
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Transformative justice and restorative justice: Gender-based violence and alternative visions of justice in the United States International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2020-11-26 Mimi E. Kim
In the United States, the contemporary feminist movement against gender-based violence started in the early 1970s, just as ideologies and policies supporting mass criminalization launched what became a five-fold rise in U.S. rates of incarceration. Since the new millennium, people of color have taken the lead in re-envisioning fundamental notions of justice given the dramatic backdrop of mass incarceration
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Sociality of hate: The transmission of victimization of LGBT+ people through social media International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2020-11-18 James Pickles
Hate crimes carry many emotional and psychological detriments for those who are targeted because of who they are. The harms associated with hate are commonly theorized in the context of those direc...
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Supporting the survivors: Experiences and perceptions of peer support offered to UK terrorist survivors International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2020-10-28 Nichola Emma Jalfon Rew
Recent terror incidents in the UK, including the targeting of concert attendees in Manchester, to individuals socialising and working in central London, highlight the public’s vulnerability and that attacks can be indiscriminate, resulting in any individual becoming a victim to this fearful crime. As a consequence of these and other attacks, including those overseas, media reporting within the UK has
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Exploring the effects of long-term anti-social behaviour victimisation International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2020-10-12 Vicky Heap
Despite victimological interest in the impacts of different types of criminal victimisation, there is little empirical work that examines the effects of sub-criminal behaviour on victims. This arti...
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Making sense of violence and victimization in health care work: The emotional labour of ‘not taking it personally’ International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2020-09-16 Laura Funk, Dale Spencer, Rachel Herron
Despite significant impacts on employee health, workplace violence tends to be minimized and normalized by service workers and by organizations, with employees implicitly held culpable for causing aggression through how they manage interactions. Little is known about how workers accomplish minimization and normalization, or how this process might be entwined with the emotional labour of containing
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An insider looking in or an outsider wannabee? Studying vulnerable hard-to-reach populations in the field of victimology – the example of the Roma communities in Sweden International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2020-09-07 Simon Wallengren
This article reviews methodological barriers to victimological research on vulnerable hard-to-reach populations and presents a reflexive discussion of insider and outsider positions in a study rese...
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Haunting and transitional justice: On lives, landscapes and unresolved pasts International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2020-08-13 Cheryl Lawther
This article explores practices of haunting and ghosting after conflict-related loss. This is not to suggest a focus on the occult or the paranormal, but to use these phenomena as a prism through which to understand the intersection between unresolved pasts and the transmission of trauma post-conflict. As Michael Levan notes, trauma lingers ‘unexorcisably in the places of its perpetration, in the bodies
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US law enforcement’s role in victim compensation dissemination International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2020-08-06 Robert C Davis, Kalani Johnson, Michael J Lebron, Susan Howley
Victim compensation programs seek to alleviate adverse effects of victimization and repay victim losses. A few studies have concluded that US compensation programs are under-utilized because victims are unaware of such programs and police officers overlook sharing the information. The present study sought to further explore this issue from the perspective of state compensation directors and police
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The effect of sexual victimization on attachment in emerging adulthood: An analysis of an African-American sample International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2020-07-30 Stephen Watts, Sara Z Evans, Leslie G Simons, Ronald L Simons
Research has consistently shown that sexual victimization during childhood and adolescence can lead to negative outcomes. However, little research to date has sought to test whether these experiences can shape security of attachment in adulthood, an important concept in attachment theory. Utilizing a longitudinal community sample of African Americans, the current study tested whether sexual victimization
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Perceptions of justice and victims of crimes against humanity in Guinea International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2020-06-19 Rouguiatou Balde, Jo-Anne Wemmers
Crimes against humanity in Guinea have caused many thousands of deaths, the exile of countless individuals, and the rape of hundreds of women. Since its independence in 1958, Guinea has been ruled ...
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Relationships between lawyers and victims of crime: Forming a new context International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2020-04-29 Naama Katz, Dana Pugach, Shulamit Ramon
This qualitative study offers a comprehensive overview of lawyers and clients who have been victims of crimes as to their optimal relationship, based on interviews with both groups. The findings cl...
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The ‘psychological turn’ in self-help services for sexual abuse victims: Drivers and dilemmas International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2020-04-20 Kari Stefansen, Ingrid Smette, Jane Dullum
This article describes an ongoing process of transformation in sexual abuse counselling centres in Norway that involves a new classification of groups of victims. These centres have traditionally operated at the grassroots level and outside the statutory system of services for victims and with an open-door policy for all victims. Drawing on field visits and interviews with staff, we explore how the
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The differential portrayal of ‘sympathetic’ homicide victims in the media International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2020-04-10 Jessica Bouchard, Jennifer S. Wong, Kelsey Gushue
The over-representation of crime is a prevalent occurrence in the media; so too is the under-representation of certain types of victims of crime. The purpose of the current study is to explore the role that characteristics of homicide victims play in the presentation and prominence of a news story. The study uses a sample of 3,998 newspaper articles on homicide from the Vancouver Sun to assess the
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The mixed and hybrid criminal courts of Brazil: Mainstreaming restoration, rehabilitation and community justice in a human rights context International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2020-04-09 Tyrone Kirchengast, Tatiana Badaró, Lucas Pardini
In Brazil, minor to mid-level criminal offences are dealt with through an inventive community problem-solving paradigm that sees a shift from traditional court engagement between the accused and state towards a therapeutic process that involves all participants in the justice process. This article considers the work of the Domestic Violence and Special Justice Courts of Brazil, by examining their use
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Book review: Victimology: A Canadian Perspective International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2020-03-09 Tyrone Kirchengast
campaigns, and ‘causes célèbres’ to inspire others and provoke change. This book is engaging and informative, mixing an impressive breadth of research on the perpetuation of gendered violence, and its structural and cultural drivers, with vivid and often heartbreaking individual stories. However, in constantly highlighting the need for a variety of interventions at multiple levels of interaction, it
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Justice perspectives of women with disability: An Australian story International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2020-02-18 Jude McCulloch, JaneMaree Maher, Sandra Walklate, Jasmine McGowan, Kate Fitz-Gibbon
The article explores the meaning of ‘justice’ for women with disability who have experienced and reported violent crimes, typically, sexual assault and family violence. It contributes to the small ...
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Profile of repeat victimisation within multi-agency referrals International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2020-02-03 Sarah Shorrock, Michelle A McManus, Stuart Kirby
To help reduce victimisation, safeguarding practices in England and Wales are becoming more multi-agency, with Multi-Agency Safeguarding Hubs (MASH) being a contemporary example of such an approach. MASH aims to reduce victimisation by identifying and managing vulnerability at the earliest opportunity. This is achieved through the co-location of safeguarding agencies, joint decision making and the
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Health consequences and help-seeking among victims of crime: An examination of sex differences International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2020-01-27 Lena Campagna, Heather Zaykowski
This study examines whether sex differences in level of distress and help-seeking for physical and emotional problems as a result of criminal victimization can be explained by injury, type of crime, and the victim–offender relationship. The study uses data from the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) from 2008–2014. Analyses utilize multivariate logistic regression and interaction terms to address
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Forced marriage as a lived experience: Victims’ voices International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2019-12-31 Carolina Villacampa
The official response to forced marriage in the majority of European countries has been to criminalise the practice. Based on racial stereotypes and outdated Orientalist perspectives, this overlooks the prior need for appropriate empirical analysis in order to better understand the reality of the practice being regulated, and fails to provide victims with the means of protection they need beyond the
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The significance of context and victim–offender relationship for Swedish social workers’ understandings of young men’s violent victimization International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2019-12-31 Mikael Skillmark, Christian Kullberg
This article investigates how social workers’ interpretations of contextual factors and the relationship between victim and offender affect their understanding and assessment of male violent victimization. The study was designed as a multiple case study with a qualitative comparative approach. Focus group interviews supported by vignettes were used to collect data. Interviews were carried out with
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What’s law got to do with it? Comparing the failure to deter or convict rapists in the United Kingdom and South Africa International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2019-11-27 Maggie Wykes, Lillian Artz
The journey from reporting rape to convicting rapists is complex, leading to high attrition and non-conviction rates. After wide consultation, the law in England and Wales was revised in 2003 to try to secure more convictions. In South Africa, a similar process occurred to produce a new law in 2007. Nonetheless, reported rapes have risen and conviction rates have fallen in both jurisdictions and it
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Visibility and vulnerability: A mixed methodology approach to studying Roma individuals’ victimization experiences International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2019-11-14 Simon Wallengren, Anders Wigerfelt, Berit Wigerfelt, Caroline Mellgren
The present study examines the prevalence and impact of victimization among a sample of Roma individuals in Malmö and Gothenburg (Sweden). The aim of the study was to examine the link between visibility and victimization, and whether the Roma community employs behavioural strategies to reduce visibility, and, finally, to analyse how such strategies affect the group. The study design combines survey
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Book review: Gender Identity, Sexual Orientation, and Sexual Assault: Challenging the Myths International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2019-10-23 James Pickles
this with international examples, also noting the limits of this responsibility. Applying international human rights norms within the U.S. would require the U.S. to adopt the concept of ‘due diligence’, necessitating expansion of the current U.S. focus on prosecution and punishment to a broader obligation that also prevents and protects against IPV and provides redress for victims. The human rights
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Veiled Muslim women’s responses to experiences of gendered Islamophobia in the UK International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2019-09-23 Irene Zempi
In a post-9/11 climate, Islamophobia has increased significantly in the UK and elsewhere in the West. ISIS-inspired terrorist attacks in the UK as well as in France, Belgium, Germany and, more recently, in Sri Lanka have triggered an increase in verbal and physical attacks on Muslims. Drawing on intersectionality (as a nexus of identities that work together to render certain individuals as ‘ideal’
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‘Some men deeply hate women, and express that hatred freely’: Examining victims’ experiences and perceptions of gendered hate crime International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2019-09-05 Hannah Mason-Bish, Marian Duggan
Extensive debate about the place of gender within the hate-crime policy domain has been fuelled by national victimisation surveys indicating people’s experiences of ‘gender hate crime’ coupled with Nottinghamshire Police’s decision to begin categorising misogynistic street harassment as a form of hate crime. Drawing on the results of an online survey of 85 respondents, this article explores people’s
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Regional, structural, and demographic predictors of violent victimization: A cross-national, multilevel analysis of 112 countries International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2019-08-25 Katie E Corcoran, Rodney Stark
Routine activities and lifestyles theories emphasize structural and demographic predictors that affect the opportunity to commit crime and the likelihood of being victimized. Past research tends to focus on either the individual- or country-level with few studies incorporating both. Additionally, past research primarily draws on the International Crime Victimization Survey, which results in small country
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Perceptions of safety confronted by experience: How visitors to Istanbul modified their perceptions of risk and fear in the light of personal experience International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2019-08-04 Rob I Mawby, Mine Özaşçılar, Neylan Ziyalar
This paper compares the perceptions of risk and safety of those arriving on a visit to Istanbul with a similar sample of those returning from their trip. While the two samples are of different individuals, the research does provide a proxy measure of change, or lack of it, in the light of personal experience. In this sense, it offers an advantage over traditional crime surveys that present a snapshot
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Young victims’ positioning: Narrations of victimhood and support International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2019-06-18 Sara Thunberg, Kjerstin Andersson Bruck
The present study aims to analyze how young people narratively negotiate their position as victims, how their social surroundings react to their victim positioning and what types of support they are offered. It is argued that those who position themselves as innocent victims receive support, while those who do not position themselves as such are left to fend for themselves. It is concluded that receiving
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Redressing the balance: Lived experiences of the harms of visually mediated transgender identity International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2019-04-16 Katie McBride
Trans* identities have a history of being constructed, regulated and erased. Often a trans* individual’s social status is judged by others on the basis of their perception of that individual’s achievement of normative standards of gender. We are living through a time characterized by the prioritization of visual identity alongside intense scrutiny of trans* identities in relation to their authenticity
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Reality versus rhetoric: Assessing the efficacy of third-party hate crime reporting centres International Review of Victimology Pub Date : 2019-04-11 Kevin Wong, Kris Christmann, Michelle Rogerson, Neil Monk
The underreporting of hate crime is recognised as problematic for jurisdictions across Europe and beyond. Within the UK, the landmark inquiry report into the murder of Stephen Lawrence 25 years ago has seen governments faithfully adhering to a policy of promoting the increased reporting of hate crime. An enduring legacy of the inquiry, third-party reporting centres (TPRCs) have been equally faithfully