Lecture 10 - Victims Flashcards

1
Q

What is Victimology?

A

The study of the causes of victimisation, its consequences, how the CJS accomodates and assists victims and how other elements of society deal with victims.

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2
Q

What is Victimisation?

A

the process of being victimised. To treat someone in an intentionally unfair way; criminal or non-criminal.

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3
Q

Briefly describe the history of victimology.

A

First used by Mendelsohn 1947, crucially interdisciplinary.
Home Office 2005 - Rebuilding lives & Criminal injuries compensation authority = key moment victims became a concern.
Daigle & Muftic 2016 - early studies focused on what victims were doing that caused their victimisation; precipitation, facilitation & Provocation.

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4
Q

Name the 5 categories of victims according to Mendelsohn 1947

A
  • Completely innocent
  • Minor guilt
  • Equally guilty
  • More guilty
  • Imagined
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5
Q

What are the risk factors for assault?

A

Varies with gender, age, race, SES, prior victimisation history, psychiatric history, substance abuse and geographic location.

Mental health correlates with victimisation - capacity, witness ability, concentration and ridiculed/agg behaviour.

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6
Q

Define Attrition.

A

Number of crimes committed and the number of crimes that end in the perpetrator being committed - attrition gap.

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7
Q

Why do victims withdraw complaints?

A
  • Hurdles and fears: knowing they are a victim in first place and that it is wrong, who to tell, disbelief.
  • Loss of control: telling someone - have control of info as well.
  • Predictors: stranger, older, stable family
  • Intimidation: from family members.
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8
Q

Why do victims proceed with complaints?

A
  • Stop further assaults
  • Protect others
  • Want truth out
  • Fear of perpetrator
  • Wanting perpetrator sanctioned
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9
Q

What is Acute Stress Disorder and what are the 5 categories?

A

Exposure to actual or threatened death, serious injury or sexual violation.

  1. Intrusion
  2. Negative mood
  3. Dissociation
  4. Avoidance
  5. Arousal
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10
Q

What is PTSD and the 3 symptoms?

A

Extreme trauma responded to with fear, helplessness and horror:

  1. Re-experiencing event
  2. Avoiding reminders
  3. Hyper-arousal
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11
Q

What are the 3 types of PTSD according to Kilpatrick & Alcierno 2003?

A
  1. Acute: less than 3 months
  2. Chronic: more than 3 months
  3. Delayed onset: 6 months after trauma
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12
Q

What changes have been made in DSM-5 for PTSD?

A

Unexpected death no longer included
Hopelessness, fear, horror removed
Negative thoughts & reckless/destructive behaviour added.

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13
Q

What are the 5 techniques for PTSD?

A
Exposure therapy
Anxiety management
Interpersonal therapy
Group therapy
CBT
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