by IngeVanfraechem (Editor), Antony Pemberton (Editor), Felix Mukwiza Ndahinda (Editor)
Justice for Victims brings together the world's leading scholars in the fields of study surrounding victimization in a pioneering international collection. This book focuses on the current study of victims of crime, combining both legal and social-scientific perspectives, articulating both in new directions and questioning whether victims really do have more rights in our modern world.
This book offers an interdisciplinary approach, covering large-scale (political) victimization, terrorist victimization, sexual victimization and routine victimization. Split into three sections, this book provides in-depth coverage of: victims' rights, transitional justice and victims' perspectives, and trauma, resilience and justice. Victims' rights are conceptualised in the human rights framework and discussed in relation to supranational, international and regional policies. The transitional justice section covers victims of war from those caught between peace and justice, as well as post-conflict justice. The final section focuses on post-traumatic stress, connecting psychological and anthropological perceptions in analysing collective violence, mass victimization and trauma.
This book addresses challenging and new issues in the field of victimology and the study of transitional and restorative justice. As such, it will be of interest to researchers, practitioners and students interested in the fields of victimology, transitional justice, restorative justice and trauma work.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 428
Edition: 1
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 03 Mar 2016
ISBN 10: 1138666106
ISBN 13: 9781138666108
`This book is imaginative, ambitious, state of the art, interdisciplinary and international and has futuristic reflections on justice for victims.' - Dr Pamela Davies, Teaching Fellow and Director of Criminology, Northumbria University, UK
`Justice for Victims is an anthology that should be in university libraries across the world. It provides an impressive smorgasbord of writings from some known scholars, but also many new scholars whose contributions to Victimology can now be easily accessed. It covers rights for victims, justice in countries in transition, and issues of reconciliation between oppressors and oppressed.' - Irvin Waller, President, International Organization for Victim Assistance and Professor, University of Ottawa, Canada