20%
130.90
CHF104.70
Download est disponible immédiatement
This festschrift in honor of the work and legacy of Dr. Marc Groenhuijsen provides an international and holistic overview of recent developments in victimology, taking a global scope but grounded in everyday experiences of victims. Its multidisciplinary perspective reflects a range of approaches and practices in victimology, including contributions from the fields of social work, criminology, sociology, psychology, and law. Firstly, the volume introduces new perspectives in victimology, and then analyzes different forms of victimization in countries worldwide. It gives special attention to victims' rights and participation in the criminal justice system, detailing victim-centered approaches to justice through practices such as restorative justice and restitution.
Highlighting the growth and development of victimology from a specialization in criminology to an academic discipline in its own right, this book reflects the range of approaches and depth of scholarship in the field. This will be an essential resource to students of victimology, researchers, policy makers, and victim's advocates.
Auteur
Janice Joseph is a Distinguished Professor of the Criminal Justice Program at Stockton University and presently the Coordinator of the Victimology and Victim Services Minor Program. In 2010, she became the 47th President of the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences (ACJS), a national criminal justice organization, with over 2,000 members. She has also served as ACJS United Nations NGO representative for over ten years. She was elected several times as a member of the Executive Board of the International Scientific and Professional Advisory Council (ISPAC) of the United Nations Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice Programme, Milan, Italy and was the Chair of the Working Party on Violence Against Women for that UN Institute. She is presently one of the Vice Presidents of the World Society of Victimology (WSV) and the Chair of the Standards and Norms for that organization. She was also Chair of the UN Liaison Committee of WSV. She is also the Editor of the Journal of Ethnicity in Criminal Justice, a scholarly criminal justice journal. Her broad research interests include gangs, juvenile delinquency, female victims, and women and criminal justice. She has over 70 publications and made over 150 professional presentations in more than 26 different countries.
Stacie Jergenson is an Assistant Professor at Bemidji State University, where her primary teaching responsibilities have included conceptualization, development and delivery of a Victimology emphasis and all associated courses (theory, practice, forensics, global perspectives, and restorative justice). She also has 15 years of state court service under the appointment of a district court judge. She holds a Ph.D. in Criminal Justice and M.S. in Public Safety Executive Leadership, as well as a Certificate in Restorative Justice. She has served in various capacities, including Program Committee, Chair of Comparative Justice area, and Student Affairs Committee of the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences (ACJS); elected to Board of Directors and Strategic Planning Committee of the American Association of Electronic Reporters & Transcribers (AAERT); elected Co-Chair of Statewide (Judicial Branch) Labor-Management Committee; and founding member of the Beltrami County Anti-Sex Trafficking Task Force which strives to build community awareness, as well as connections with three local American Indian reservations. Her research topics include victim services, restorative justice practices, applied victimology, human and sex trafficking, prostitution, murdered and missing indigenous women, epidemiological criminology, homicides, and GIS/spatial analyses. She regularly travels and lectures internationally.
Contenu
Part I New Perspectives and Approaches in Victimology.- 1 Cyber Victimology: A New Sub-Discipline of the 21st Century Victimology.- 2. From Victim to Survivor to Overcomer.- 3. The Relevance of Error Margins in The Trend Towards Algorithmic Victimology: Some Remarks on The Futures of Theory and Risk Assessment From The Spanish Periphery.- 4. A Victimological Exploration of the African Values of Ubuntu.- 5. New Perspectives on a General Methodology of Victim Support.- 6. Victim Labeling Theory; A Reappraisal.- Part II: Types of Victimization.- 7. Arab girls at risk of victimization: Cultural and Personal characteristics.- 8. Transphobic Femicide: An Intersectional Perspective.- 9. Maritime Piracy Victimization of Seafarers and Their Families.- 10. Domestic Minor Sex Trafficking in the United States: A Victim-Centered Approach.- 11. Findings from an Intervention on the Prevention of Sexual Abuse of Children from Mayan Communities in Mexico.- Part III: Victims' Rights and Participation in the Criminal Justice System.- 12. What Can We Achieve By 2030? Rights for Victims of Crime in the Era of Sustainable Development Goals.- 13. The Value of Legal Provisions for An Adequate Treatment of Victims of Crime: Does The Victims' Rights Directive of The European Union Set A New Benchmark?.- 14. Ensuring Victims' Participation in the Criminal Justice System of the United States of America.- 15. Improving access to justice: Procedural justice through legal counsel for victims of crime.- 16. Victims Behind the Model Minority Myth: Are Asian Americans Model Victims?.- Part IV: Practical Dimensions of Victimology.- 17. Victim-Initiated Restorative Justice.- 18. Restorative Justice implemented by the Judiciary in Brazil: results and the role of the victim.- 19. Introducing restorative approaches in prison settings: An example of a Victim Awareness Program in Serbia.- 20. Restitution: Helping Victims or Offenders?.- 21. Evaluating the Challenges to Victim Services in North America.- 22. Applied Victimology: The Professional Practice of Victimology.