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? |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 42 筆
... police stations to fulfil their intended function of informing the decision-making of other criminal justice agencies in the light of victims' experiences. This has major implications for victims' confidence in the criminal justice ...
... police (Rock 1990, p.165). It was organised in a highly centralised way so that information (and funding) came from the centre and local dissent could easily be suppressed. Once these structures were established, the Home Office invited ...
... police departments (Mawby 2003). National organisations were also set up in the 1980s in France and Germany. In Germany there are in fact two organisations: the Weisser Ring, which covers the whole country, complemented by additional ...
... police in most countries offer a graduated response to witnesses depending on an assessment of their needs and vulnerabilities. This tends to be a more sophisticated process in densely populated urban areas, some of which, in England ...
... police had collected evidence at the outset which reduced the necessity for victims to give oral testimony in court (particularly videotaped statements and photographs of the victims' injuries), and also in cases where they received ...
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 |