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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... serious cases, police escorts to and from court, and so on (Williams 2002). In theory, it has been possible for courts in England and Wales to accept written statements by intimidated witnesses since 1988, but this power was rarely used ...
... serious cases – recognising that immediate imprisonment is not usually welcomed by victims and their families (see Chapter Five). However, research in the specialist court in Toronto has found that the combination of mandatory arrest ...
... serious offenders are referred, although the courts have discretion to do so. Somewhere between three and five local volunteers constitute each meeting of a board. Initially recruited from among 'prominent local leaders', boards are now ...
... serious crimes such as rape, kidnapping supposed spies, and arson. Ultimately, the Mandela United Football Club and Winnie Mandela were implicated in the deaths of Stompie Seipei and others in 1988, and they were publicly condemned for ...
... going people to assist on a voluntary basis, including a Neighbourhood Watch volunteer who would represent community concerns about the release of a serious sexual offender COMMUNITYJUSTICE AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR VICTIMS / 39.
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 |