The Development Of Victimology

The second half of the twentieth century saw the development of social concern, protest, activism, intervention, legal, political, and social services reform, research, and teaching about victims of crime. In some countries, the victim movement became an important separate political force leading to substantial reforms in many fields. It is particularly in the Anglo-Saxon world that the movement began and flourished, expanding eventually to other parts of the world. In the United States, the victim movement began in the 1970s. The women’s movement, inspired by the civil rights movement, was one of its primary moving forces. Another was the social concern about the dramatic increase in crime rates in the United States. Conservatives and right-of-center activists and politicians pointed out that the system of constitutional protections in the United States favored the suspect and the convicted criminal while it trampled on the needs of the victims denying them minimal rights and consideration. Thus, focusing on the victims became a rallying cry for a more restrictive...

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Towards a Revitalization of Theory and Research on Victimization by Crime

INTRODUCTION
Not long ago Dr. Edward C. Stone, chief scientist of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory's Saturn project observed that at this stage in their work scientific creativity was largely a team effort because planetary discovery requires the peculiar talents of astronomers, geologists, physicists, meteorologists, and mathematicians. He went on to observe that: The usual creative process, the quintessential scientific process, tends to be a very individual process. . . . You have an idea yourself, you conceive of ways to test your idea, you do your experiments and you report the results. This is the classical method and it usually occurs over a long period of time. But here lots of people see the data at the same time. They begin immediately to suggest ideas and expose constraints on what the data could mean. Peer review is going on at each step of the way, not at the end of the process.Although the study of victimization is in many ways formally analogous...

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