Abstract: This paper seeks to explain how crime victims have become increasingly visible in the criminal justice system and in media portrayals of crime by looking to the U.S. victims ’ rights movement and its strategic mobilization of a particular construction of “crime victim ” into the public sphere. Through analysis of the movement’s documentation of its media strategies and new forms of victim-ori-ented journalistic practice, the paper demonstrates how the movement portrays crime through its construction of crime victims as a class of citizens without rights, through which the families of murder victims become proxy-victims. Résumé: Cet article cherche à expliquer la visibilité croissante des victimes de délits dans le système criminel...
Rights for crime victims have been decried as myths; entitlements that have little enforceability. A...
With the advent of the Bill of Rights, making the offender less accessible, journalists are falling ...
Today the science and practice of contemporary crime, the perpetrator and the victim are treated as ...
457 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2002.This dissertation examines th...
457 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2002.This dissertation examines th...
The definition of who may legitimately claim victim status is profoundly influenced by social divisi...
Crime victims are now significant voices in criminal justice politics and reform. No longer the invi...
Crime victims are now significant voices in criminal justice politics and reform. No longer the invi...
Crime victims are now significant voices in criminal justice politics and reform. No longer the invi...
Crime victims are now significant voices in criminal justice politics and reform. No longer the invi...
Crime victims are now significant voices in criminal justice politics and reform. No longer the invi...
This Article examines a unique facet of the victims\u27 rights movement: the use of victim impact ev...
This book provides a thorough account of victimisation across the social spectrum of class, race, ag...
The victims\u27 rights movement has only recently gained national exposure. The advances in vi...
There is a growing recognition that crime victims have identifiable interests of sufficient legitim...
Rights for crime victims have been decried as myths; entitlements that have little enforceability. A...
With the advent of the Bill of Rights, making the offender less accessible, journalists are falling ...
Today the science and practice of contemporary crime, the perpetrator and the victim are treated as ...
457 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2002.This dissertation examines th...
457 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2002.This dissertation examines th...
The definition of who may legitimately claim victim status is profoundly influenced by social divisi...
Crime victims are now significant voices in criminal justice politics and reform. No longer the invi...
Crime victims are now significant voices in criminal justice politics and reform. No longer the invi...
Crime victims are now significant voices in criminal justice politics and reform. No longer the invi...
Crime victims are now significant voices in criminal justice politics and reform. No longer the invi...
Crime victims are now significant voices in criminal justice politics and reform. No longer the invi...
This Article examines a unique facet of the victims\u27 rights movement: the use of victim impact ev...
This book provides a thorough account of victimisation across the social spectrum of class, race, ag...
The victims\u27 rights movement has only recently gained national exposure. The advances in vi...
There is a growing recognition that crime victims have identifiable interests of sufficient legitim...
Rights for crime victims have been decried as myths; entitlements that have little enforceability. A...
With the advent of the Bill of Rights, making the offender less accessible, journalists are falling ...
Today the science and practice of contemporary crime, the perpetrator and the victim are treated as ...