Victims of Crime and Community JusticeJessica Kingsley Publishers, 2005年5月15日 - 176 頁 Can a victim's experience really be improved purely by diminishing the rights of offenders and increasing penalties for offending? |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 48 筆
... change, and to raise some questions about the genuineness of the current apparent policy interest in victim issues. Organisations claiming to represent victims have become increasingly vocal and influential over this period and in the ...
... change. In particular, the current model of service provision is examined in the light of what we now know about corporate and organised crime: these involve large numbers of individual victims whose needs are not met effectively by ...
... change within the agencies involved. However, it comes some years after the first attempt at this approach in the UK and, like the UK charter, it is neither well-known nor well-publicised. It also creates no new rights, but rather lists ...
... changes made which do not really benefit victims, they are made at the expense of other groups within the criminal justice system (in practice, principally offenders). There is a fundamental misunderstanding here. First, victims and ...
... changes were made without any consultation with victims or the organisations which represent their interests. Alongside changing attitudes towards victims at the national political level, the period since the 1970s has also seen the ...
內容
9 | |
27 | |
Restorative justice and its implications for victims | 57 |
Improving the position of victims of crime | 87 |
Real improvements for victims of crime | 112 |
Conclusions | 127 |
REFERENCES
| 153 |
SUBJECT INDEX
| 169 |
AUTHOR INDEX
| 174 |