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 82 筆
... process the issues involved have inevitably been politicised: some of the advantages and drawbacks of this development are discussed in this chapter, along with a brief and selective history of victim policy internationally, which aims ...
... system tends to concentrate on punishing, changing and rehabilitating offenders; victims are sometimes called upon to assist with these aims rather than receiving recognition of their potentially central role in the criminal justice process ...
... crime). A similar approach to victims' rights was taken in Ireland, but the Irish Victim's Charter and Guide to the Criminal Justice System (DJELR 1999) provides victims with more information about the law and the criminal justice system ...
... process goes even further. Not only are symbolic 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 ...
... criminal justice systems in modern times. It was in that year that the New Zealand government legislated for a compensation scheme for the victims of certain types of crime; this was followed in 1964 by the introduction of a similar ...
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 |