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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... scheme in England and Wales was meant to avoid the pitfalls of Victim Impact Statements in other jurisdictions. In practice these statements are routinely taken from victims but they rarely seem to leave police stations to fulfil their ...
... scheme for the victims of certain types of crime; this was followed in 1964 by the introduction of a similar scheme in the UK, initially on an experimental basis but later made statutory. Other countries followed suit over the coming ...
... scheme as it exists in the UK does not symbolise any kind of official recognition of state liability for the injuries caused by crime. The White Paper which proposed the experimental scheme made this clear. Rather, it is a welfare ...
... scheme eventually proposed had clear limits upon eligibility, and the UK scheme was influential in its discrimination between 'deserving' and 'undeserving' victims, a distinction which remains a sore point to this day. State ...
... schemes were first set up (by the probation service) in The Netherlands in 1975, and an independent national organisation was established in 1984. State funding was received from national and local government departments for the cost of ...
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 |