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Summary 'Victimology and the Criminal justice system' (A. Pemberton)

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Summary course 'Victimology and the Criminal justice system', year , Professor A. Pemberton. 152 pages and table of contents. This summary contains mostly the PowerPoints.

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  • May 24, 2020
  • 158
  • 2019/2020
  • Summary

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VICTIMOLOGY AND THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM

TABLE OF CONTENTS


VICTIMOLOGY AND THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM........................................................................1


H.1. INTRODUCTION TO VICTIMOLOGY.....................................................................................................4
SUSAN BRISON – AFTERMATH......................................................................................................................4
THE ‘JANUS-FACE’ OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE.........................................................................................................6
CONCERNING CIRCLES OF VICTIMS..................................................................................................................7
H.2. CRIMINOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES: PART 1...........................................................................................8
DEFINING VICTIMIZATION BY CRIME: SOME COMPLEXITIES..................................................................................8
COUNTING VICTIMIZATION BY CRIME............................................................................................................10
SOMETHING WE (THINK WE) KNOW ABOUT VICTIMIZATION BY CRIME.................................................................15
SOME EXPLANATIONS OF VICTIMIZATION BY CRIME..........................................................................................16
H.3. CRIMINOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE: PART 2...........................................................................................21
CHILD VICTIMIZATION: DEVELOPMENTAL VICTIMOLOGY....................................................................................21
INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE: VIOLENCE AT HOME.........................................................................................24
GENDERED VIOLENCE RESEARCH (THE RABBITS)..............................................................................................26
RAPE VICTIMIZATION.................................................................................................................................28
CO-VICTIMS OF HOMICIDE..........................................................................................................................32
CYBERCRIME VICTIMIZATION.......................................................................................................................35
VICTIMS OF TERRORISM.............................................................................................................................37
TERRORISM: WHOSE VICTIMIZATION IS IT?.....................................................................................................37
VICTIMS OF ATROCITY CRIMES: GENOCIDE.....................................................................................................40
H.4.: PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES ON VICTIMIZATION............................................................................44
PERSPECTIVES..........................................................................................................................................44
TRAUMATIC STRESS...................................................................................................................................44
TRAUMATIC MEMORIES.............................................................................................................................50
SHATTERED ASSUMPTIONS (JANOF-BULAM 1992).........................................................................................52
BLAMING................................................................................................................................................53
CONTROL (FRAZIER)..................................................................................................................................53
VICTIM ENTITLEMENT................................................................................................................................53
(NARCISSTIC) ENTITLEMENT........................................................................................................................54
VICTIM NARRATIVES..................................................................................................................................54
COMPETITIVE VICTIMHOOD.........................................................................................................................56
BIASED MEMORY: IDENTITY IN VICTIMISATION................................................................................................56
A DIFFERENT EXAMPLE OF THE ROLE OF VICTIMIZATION IN INGROUP IDENTITY......................................................57
COMPETITIVE VICTIMHOOD: CONSEQUENCES.................................................................................................57
ADAPTIVE ENTITLEMENT............................................................................................................................58
A DIFFERENT REACTION TO VICTIMISATION....................................................................................................58
FRAMING VICTIMIZATION...........................................................................................................................61


1

,VICARIOUS RETRIBUTION............................................................................................................................62
A STUDY IN FOLK PSYCHOLOGY....................................................................................................................63
THE PECULIAR EFFECTS OF THINKING ABOUT YOUR OWN DEATH.........................................................................63
PERSPECTIVES..........................................................................................................................................64
AN EXAM EXAMPLE...................................................................................................................................64
H.5. SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES........................................................................................................66
SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES......................................................................................................................66
THE DISCOVERY OF ‘NEW VICTIMS’...............................................................................................................67
WHOPPER THE BULLDOG...........................................................................................................................68
STRAIGHTFORWARD RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN VICTIM-VICTIMIZER.......................................................................68
WHAT’S IN A WORD?................................................................................................................................68
THE VICTIM LABEL.....................................................................................................................................69
THE MYTH OF PURE EVIL...........................................................................................................................69
DIFFERENCE WITH REAL LIFE.......................................................................................................................70
JACK KATZ: WHAT MAKES CRIME NEWS?......................................................................................................71
HOW IS VICTIMIZATION PORTRAYED IN CAMPAIGNS TO SUPPORT VICTIMS?..........................................................72
FRAMING................................................................................................................................................73
NOT FOLLOWING THE STEREOTYPES..............................................................................................................74
NOT DISPLAYING THE ‘RIGHT; REACTION’.......................................................................................................74
MICRO-AGGRESSION.................................................................................................................................75
DIFFICULTY SEEING VICTIMS AND OFFENDERS AT THE SAME TIME.......................................................................76
IN REALITY: LARGE OVERLAP BETWEEN VICTIMS AND OFFENDERS........................................................................77
WHOSE CLAIMS GET RESPECTED?................................................................................................................77
CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE IN THE CATHOLIC CHURCH.............................................................................................78
FALSE RATHER THAN REPRESSED MEMORIES...................................................................................................78
VICTIMISATION /VICTIMOLOGY: WHY NOW?..................................................................................................79
LESSONS FROM THE CLASSICS......................................................................................................................79
FEMINISM AND THE ETHICS OF CARE............................................................................................................81
VICTIMS ISSUES & CARE............................................................................................................................81
RISKS.....................................................................................................................................................83
THERAPY CULTURE (FUREDI, 2004).............................................................................................................83
OVERVIEW..............................................................................................................................................84
SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES......................................................................................................................84
EXAMPLE OF AN EXAM QUESTION................................................................................................................85
H.6. JUSTICE PERSPECTIVES.................................................................................................................86
JUSTICE PERSPECTIVES...............................................................................................................................86
SECONDARY VICTIMIZATION........................................................................................................................86
NEEDS RELATING TO THE HARM OF VICTIMISATION..........................................................................................87
VICTIMISATION IS BOTH HARMFUL AND WRONGFUL........................................................................................88
REVENGE AND RETRIBUTION.......................................................................................................................90
COMPENSATION, SYMBOLIC REPARATION AND VALUE RESTORATION...................................................................94
INTERACTIONAL JUSTICE, INFORMATIONAL JUSTICE AND PROCEDURAL JUSTICE......................................................96
A TYPOLOGY OF VICTIMS RIGHTS..................................................................................................................98
SUMMARY..............................................................................................................................................99


2

,EXAM QUESTION......................................................................................................................................99
H. 7 RESTORATIVE PERSEPCTIVES/JUSTICE............................................................................................100
INTRODUCTION......................................................................................................................................100
DEFINITION OF RESTORATIVE JUSTICE..........................................................................................................100
SITUATING RESTORATIVE JUSTICE...............................................................................................................101
TYPES OF RESTORATIVE JUSTICE.................................................................................................................102
THE PROCESS OF RESTORATIVE JUSTICE.......................................................................................................103
UNDERLYING THEORIES OF RESTORATIVE JUSTICES.........................................................................................104
VICTIMS AND RESTORATIVE JUSTICE............................................................................................................110
EXAM QUESTION....................................................................................................................................113
H. 8 VICTIMS IN THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM: GENERAL OVERVIEW AND INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES...........114
OUTLINE...............................................................................................................................................114
SOME BACKGROUND ON THE EU AND THE VICTIMS OF CRIME.........................................................................114
THE EU VICTIMS DIRECTIVE......................................................................................................................121
A CLOSER LOOK AT THE CONTENTS OF THE EU-DIRECTIVE...............................................................................122
THE DIRECTIVE TODAY.............................................................................................................................134
AN EXAM QUESTION...............................................................................................................................137
H.9. VICTIMS IN THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM: COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES..............................................138
REVISITING A NUMBER OF TOPICS FROM PREVIOUS LECTURES..........................................................................138
VICTIMS PROVISIONS/RIGHTS IN THREE RELATIONSHIPS..................................................................................140
TYPOLOGY OF VICTIMS RIGHTS BASED ON THREE RELATIONSHIPS (VAN DIJK)......................................................142
RELATIONSHIP B: OFFENDER – STATE “CRIMINAL LAW”..................................................................................145
RELATIONSHIP C: VICTIM – OFFENDER “CIVIL LAW/RESTORATIVE JUCTICE”.........................................................153
EXAM QUESTION....................................................................................................................................157
H.10: RECAP AND MOCK EXAM..........................................................................................................158




3

, H.1. INTRODUCTION TO VICTIMOLOGY


RESEARCH ON VICTIMS AND SOCIETY

 Narrative victimoloogy

 Cultural victimology

 Justice processes, including and in particular restorative justice

 Political violence, terrorism and international crimes

 Connection between academia and practice: past history with victim support

 Ethics of victimology


RESEARCH ON RESTOATIVE JUSTICE

 Emotions in restorative justice

 Governance of restorative justice

 Culture and restorative justice

 New frontiers in restorative justice


SUSAN BRISON – AFTERMATH

EXPCERT 1

 The aspect of control, trying to control her own victimization
 She felt the shame
 Fear to be victimized again
 More easy to talk about ‘an attempted murder’ than ‘a rape’
 Importance of different feeling and different emotions
 The importance of the experience with criminal justice actors and the manner in
which this influences and interacts with the primary experience of victimization
 The way others react to victimization:

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