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A history of victims of crime : how they reclaimed their rights

Title
A history of victims of crime : how they reclaimed their rights / Stephen J. Strauss-Walsh.
ISBN
9781032188225
1032188227
9781032188249
1032188243
9781003256434
9781000883879
9781000883800
Publication
Abingdon, Oxon [UK] ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2023.
Copyright Notice Date
©2023.
Physical Description
xxv, 242 pages ; 25 cm.
Summary
"This book examines the evolution of the contemporary crime victim's procedural place within modern western societies. Taking the history of the Irish crime victim as a case study, the work charts the place of victims within criminal justice over time. This evolves from the expansive latitude that they had during the eighteenth century, to their major relegation to witness and informer in the nineteenth, and back to a more contemporary recapturing of some of their previous centrality. The book also studies what this has meant for the position of suspects and offenders as well as the population more generally. Therefore, some analysis is devoted to examining its impact on an offender's right to fair trial and social forms. It is held that the modern crime victim has transcended its position of marginality. This happened not only in law, but as the consequence of the victim's new role as a key socio-political stakeholder. This work flags the importance of victim rights conferrals, and the social transformations that engendered such trends. In this way victim re-emergence is evidenced as being not just a legal change, but a consequence of several more recent socio-cultural transformations in our societies. The book will be of interest to researchers, academics and policy makers in criminal law, human rights law, criminology and legal history"-- Provided by publisher.
Other formats
ebook version :
Format
Books
Language
English
Added to Catalog
August 17, 2023
Series
Routledge contemporary issues in criminal justice and procedure.
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
A contextual study of victim centrality in Eighteenth Century Britain
The causes and outcomes of the exclusion of victims from the nineteeth century Irish justice system
Feminism and victimology highlight the hidden victimisation
Domestic drivers of change re-restablish the victim
Charting the Irish victim's juridicial re-integration-the evolution of the victim as a rights bearer in Ireland
The Legal reincorporation of the crime victim
Legal reincorporation of victims after trial.
Genre/Form
History.
Citation

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