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Title: Crime Victims: An Introduction to Victimology Seventh Edition


1
Crime Victims An Introduction to
VictimologySeventh Edition
  • By Andrew Karmen
  • Chapter One What is Victimology?

2
VICTIMOLOGY
  • Scientific study of physical, emotional, and
    financial harm people suffer because of illegal
    activities.
  • Included in this definition is the victimization
    occurring for victims within the criminal justice
    system.

3
VICTIMOLOGY
  • VictimsIndividuals who experience loss, injury,
    or hardship for any reason
  • Crime VictimsAbove as result of an illegal act
  • Direct/Primary VictimsExperience criminal act
    and its consequences first-hand
  • Indirect/Secondary VictimsFamily and those who
    suffer emotionally or financially but are not
    immediately involved. Can also include
    care-givers and first responders

4
Studying Victimization Scientifically
  • Subjective Approach
  • Issues are approached from standpoint of
    morality, ethics, philosophy, personalized
    reactions, and emotions
  • Objective Approach
  • Requires observer to be fair, open-minded,
    even-handed, dispassionate, neutral, and unbiased

5
Studying of Victimization Scientifically
  • Why should victimologists NOT be pro-victim?
  • Ideal Victim person who suffered harm was
    weaker than aggressor, acting virtuously or not
    looking for trouble or breaking any laws, and
    wrongdoer was a stranger acting illegally and was
    unprovoked

6
Victims or Offenders?
  • Who is the victim and who is the offender?
  • Not always clear cutconsider the following
  • Subway Vigilante
  • Menendez Brothers

7
Criminals as Victims
  • Victims not always innocent
  • Examples
  • Gang members attacking another gang
  • Drug dealer ripping off a customer
  • A john robbing a prostitute (or vice-versa)

8
Cycle of Violence
  • Cycle of violence over time can transform
    victim(s) into victimizer(s)
  • Group of picked on students may gang up against
    the bully
  • Battered wife may launch a vengeful attack
    against husband
  • Convicts much more likely to have been abused
    physically or sexually as children

9
Victims vs. Good Guys
  • Victimologists do not limit their studies to
    clashes between victims and offenders
  • They also consider the social reaction to
    victimization
  • Victims are often used by other parties
  • Media sensationalizes some cases
  • Organizations with an agenda might use a victims
    plight for publicity, fund raising, etc.

10
Victimologys Undeserved Bad Reputation
  • Victimology during the 90s and into the twentieth
    century has become a dirty word to many people
  • Do not confuse victimism with victimology
  • Victimology is often misused, when the author
    intends to describe victimism. The next slide
    is an example of mis-using the word victimology

11
Victimologys Undeserved Bad Reputation
  • (Leo, 1994) a news magazine commentator
    complained, We are deep into the era of the
    abuse excuse. The doctrine of victimologyclaimin
    g victim status means you are not responsible for
    your actionsis beginning to warp the legal
    system.

12
Victimologys Undeserved Bad Reputation
  • Victimology is a new academic discipline that
    only means the study of victims.
  • It is focused on the research about people harmed
    by criminals
  • It does not impose a partisan point of view or a
    set or predictably biased conclusions
  • The ideology of victimism is a coherent,
    integrated set of beliefs that shapes
    interpretations and leads to political action

13
Victimologys Undeserved Bad Reputation
  • Victimological research must tell the whole truth
    regardless of who is disappointed or insulted
  • Three types of biases undermine the ability of
    any social scientist to achieve objectivity. They
    include

14
Three Types of Bias
  • 1. May arise from personal experience, taking
    the form of individual preferences and prejudices
  • 2. Derives from the history of the discipline
    itself
  • Pioneers in the study of victimology first
    introduced the concept of victim-blaming
  • Today, majority of victimologists are pro-victim

15
Three Types of Bias
  • 3. A subtle bias traced back to the mood of the
    times
  • 60s-70s a demand for government to devise ways
    to help victims get back on their feet
    financially, medically, and emotionally
  • 80s a theme of self-reliance and a reduction in
    government social spending and tax cutting gained
    popularity

16
The Origins of Victimology
  • Box 1.3, Page 17, provides highlights in the
    brief history of Victimology and Victim
    Assistance
  • Significant gains in the United States when the
    Presidents Commission on Law Enforcement and the
    Administration of Justice urged criminologists to
    pay more attention to victims

17
Milestones in Victimology
  • By the 1970s victimology became a recognized
    field of study
  • By 1990, 240 colleges and universities offered
    courses in victimology
  • Most states passed crime victim rights amendments
    to their state constitution
  • 2004Congress enacts the Crime Victims Rights
    Act which provides for fair treatment and
    opportunities for input in federal court
    proceedings

18
Victimology vs. Criminology
  • Victimology is best viewed as an area of
    specialization within criminology
  • Criminology embraces the scientific study of
    crimes, criminals, criminal laws and the justice
    system, societal reactions, and crime victims

19
Victimology vs. Criminology
  • Victimologists ask why some individuals,
    households, and entities are targeted while
    others are not
  • Criminologists ask why certain individuals become
    involved in lawbreaking while others do not

20
Victimology vs. Criminology
  • Criminologists apply their findings to devise
    crime prevention strategies
  • Victimologists use patterns and trends to develop
    victimization prevention strategies and
    risk-reduction tactics
  • Both criminologists and victimologists study how
    the criminal justice system actually works versus
    how it is supposed to work

21
Victimology vs.. Criminology
  • Boundaries
  • Boundaries are clear cut for Criminology
  • Boundaries for Victimology still unclear
  • Overlap due to lack of boundaries
  • Crime rates vs. victimization rates

22
Divisions Within The Discipline
  • Conservative Influence
  • Focuses primarily on street crimes
  • Everyone to be held accountable for their
    decisions and actions
  • Emphasis on self reliance, NOT government
  • Individual responsibility for preventing,
    avoiding, resisting and recovering from criminal
    acts
  • Strictly punish offenders on behalf of their
    victims

23
Divisions Within The Discipline
  • Liberal Influence
  • Scope of field to extend beyond street crimes
  • Endorse government intervention
  • Extend safety net mechanisms for all kinds of
    misfortunes
  • Look to wrongdoers repaying their victims to
    allow for reconciliation

24
Divisions Within The Discipline
  • Radical/Critical/Conflict Influence
  • Victimization is a result of oppressive social
    system
  • Looks toward societal factors such as poverty,
    unemployment, language barriers, etc as
    explanations behind crime

25
What Victimologists Do
  • Victimologists explore the interactions between
    victims and offenders, victims and the criminal
    justice system, and victims and society
  • Victimologists study the ways in which crime
    victims are harmed, including physical injury,
    psychological trauma, and financial loss.

26
What Victimologists Do
Four step process victimologists follow when
carrying out their research
  • Step 1 Identify, Define, and Describe the
    Problem
  • Step 2 Measure the True Dimensions of the
    Problem
  • Step 3 Observe How Victims Are Handled
  • Step 4 Gather Evidence to Test Hypotheses

27
Chapter One Key Terms
Victim Victimization Victimology Direct/Primary Victims
Survivors Indirect/ Secondary Victims Subjective Approach Objectivity
Sensationalism Victimism Ideology Criminology
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Crime Control Just Deserts Operationalization
Muggability Ratings Stockholm Syndrome Incidence Rates Prevalence Rates
Lifetime Likelihoods Profile Needs Assessment Ideal Type
Plea Negotiations
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