Victimology Flashcards

1
Q

What is the UN’s definition of victim?

A

Those who’ve suffered harm through acts that violates state laws.

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2
Q

How do transgressive criminologists critique this definition?

A

doesn’t count for acts that make pp victims which aren’t laws.

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3
Q

Chances of being a victim in a year?

A

1:4

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4
Q

What groups are most likely to be victimised?

A

Poor- higher crime rates in poor areas.
Youth- pp under 1 more likely murdered.
Ethnic minorities- racially motivated.

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5
Q

What crimes are men and women likely to be victims of and why?

A

Men- Violent attacks by strangers, asserting toxic masculinity.
Women- sexual abuse.

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6
Q

How do interpretivists critique this?

A

Stats inaccurate, male abuse under reported.

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7
Q

According to the British Crime Survey, what % of the population are victims and what is this as a sum of crime committed in a year?

A

4%. 44% crime committed in yr.

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8
Q

According to positivist Miers, what are the 3 features in victimology?

A

Factors reproduce crime patterns

Victim proneness.

Sought to identify social and psychological characteristic of victims, make them different/ vulnerable than non-victims.

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9
Q

According to Hentig, what are some characteristics of victims?

A
Young.
Old
Female
Tormentor
Depressed
Being a victim depends on the type of person you are (wearing provocative clothing).
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10
Q

Describe Wolfgang’s study and findings?

A

Study of 588 homicides.

26% homicide’s involved victim precipitation- victim triggered events.

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11
Q

According to conflict theorists, what 2 elements contribute to victimology?

A

Structural factors

States power

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12
Q

What structural problems contribute to victimology?

A

Patriarchy and poverty- powerless groups at risk.
Mawby and Walklate call it structural powerlessness.
E.g., Sarah Everard.

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13
Q

How does state power contribute to victimology?

A

Victim social construction.

CJS applies label of victim some, withholds from others.

E.g., police don’t press charges against man assaulting his wife, thus denying victim label.

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14
Q

What do Thombs and Whyte say about the affects of failing to label on safety crimes?

A

employer error blames employee.

‘failure to label’- conceal victimisation and real causes, hides crimes of powerfulness, denies powerless victims.

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15
Q

What is the impact of failing to label?

A

Physical/ emotional distress.

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16
Q

Give an example of how crime creates indirect victims according to Pynoos et al?

A

found child witnesses of sniper attack continued to have altered behaviour yrs after.

Hate crimes against minorities create ‘waves of harm’ affect others.