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Summary A* student Notes on victimology for crime and deviance

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In-depth and detailed notes on crime and deviance on victimology, with definition of key terms, and specific sociologists name, such as Wolfgang … etc. notes are in PEEEL structure, where explanation and evaluationof the point is provided

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June 25, 2024
Number of pages
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Written in
2023/2024
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Victimology
definition
 Secondary victimisation
 When the way in which the police/ govt. deal w/ a victim
✔cause further harm → victim
 Victim precipitation
 Identifies processes through which ppl. Contribute → their
own victimisation
 Examines the extent to which a victim’s actions may
have contribute to the severity of crime
 E.g. WOLFGANG — 588 homicides in Philadelphia → 26%
involved victim precipitation → victim triggered events →
homicide
 Victim proneness
 Identify factors in individuals that make some ppl. / grps = ↑
likely to be victims & ∴ produce patterns in victimisation
 Repeat victimisation
 If you have been a victim once, = very likely to be one again
 De-labeling
 Deny victim official ‘victim status’ & blames them for their
fate
 Hierarchy of victimisation
 Conceptional framework that suggests a ranking/
prioritisation of victims based on stereotype of ideal victim
favoured by media
 E.g. child/ women/ elderly
 Fear of victimisation
 Scared of becoming a victim
 E.g. women = ↑ afraid of going out for fear of attack
BUT young male = main victims of violence from
strangers
 ‘Ideal’ victim
 Someone who fits the stereotype of a victim
 Weak/innocent/ blameless individual — e.g. small
child/ old woman
 Waves of harm
 Collective response where a whole grp./ community feels
hurt by a crime that has actually happened
 When whole community becomes intimidates
 E.g. hate crime against ethnic minorities create waves
of harm — society attacks one grp.
 Denial of victim status
 The state power ( moral entrepreneurs/ social control
agencies) deny the label of victims

, UN def. Of vicitimology
 Those who have suffered harm (including mental, physical or emotional,
economic loss & impairment of their basic rights) through acts/omissions →
the laws of the state
Positivist
 MIERS
 3 features of positivist victimology:
 Victim proneness
 Identify factors in individuals that make some ppl. /
grps = ↑ likely to be victims & ∴ produce patterns in
victimisation
 Focuses on interpersonal crimes of violence + how
interactions between offenders & victims → victimisation
 Victim precipitation
 Identifies processes through which ppl. Contribute →
their own victimisation
 Examines the extent to which a victim’s actions
may have contribute to the severity of crime
 WOLFGANG — 588 homicides in Philadelphia
→ 26% involved victim precipitation → victim
triggered events → homicide (e.g. being 1st to
use violence)
 GOTTFREDSON & GAROFALO — 5
demographic factors that precipitate
victimisation
 Age, gender, material status, family
income, race
 EVALUATION
 Ignores victims of state & corporate crime
 Ignore how the label of victim ✔ be provided by state
 Focus on Situational context, ignores wider structural factors — e.g.
poverty/ patriarchy
 Victim blaming — as Focus on victim precipitation
 Ignores situations where victims = unaware of their victimisation (e.g.
crime against environment, harm = done but did not break laws)


Critical
 Based on conflict theory
 Features:
 Structural factors (e.g. poverty/ patriarchy)
 Women/ children = greatest risk of victimisation
 MAWBY & WALKLATE— Victimisation = forms of
structural powerlessness
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