One routine “common sense” means of explaining sexual violence is the ideologically facilitated tendency to blame the victim, and previous research has identified patterns of victim-blaming in the talk of perpetrators of rape, and also in that of the professionals who deal with rape in their day-to-day work. This article focuses on the discursive resources drawn on in police interviews by rape victims themselves as they attempt to account for their own behaviour in relation to the attack. It identifies and describes points within interviewees’ talk where they produce “accounts” (Potter and Wetherell, 1987), and considers what these tell us about the participants’ shared understanding of what is relevant to the on-going talk. Occasions when ...
Objective(s): To examine the variation in police officers’ initial judgements of responsibility and ...
Journal Article Anderson, I.; Beattie, G.; Spencer, C. (2001): Can blaming victims of rape be logica...
Victims of rape are uniquely vulnerable for being blamed for their assault relative to victims of ot...
One routine “common sense” means of explaining sexual violence is the ideologically facilitated tend...
One routine “common sense” means of explaining sexual violence is the ideologically facilitated tend...
Across England and Wales in the year 2017–18, the number of reported cases of rape in which a charge...
This study investigates the discursive patterns of interactions between police interviewers and wome...
This study investigates the discursive patterns of interactions between police interviewers and wome...
This article presents an analysis of the discursive construction of evidence in an English police in...
The methods used by the UK Police to investigate complaints of rape have unsurprisingly come under m...
This article explores why victim-survivors engage with the police by drawing upon the accounts of 24...
The methods used by the UK Police to investigate complaints of rape have unsurprisingly come under m...
Police interviewers find the investigation of sexual crimes ‘technically difficult’ and ‘stressful’ ...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Springer Nature via the DOI in this recordD...
Objective(s): To examine the variation in police officers’ initial judgements of responsibility and ...
Objective(s): To examine the variation in police officers’ initial judgements of responsibility and ...
Journal Article Anderson, I.; Beattie, G.; Spencer, C. (2001): Can blaming victims of rape be logica...
Victims of rape are uniquely vulnerable for being blamed for their assault relative to victims of ot...
One routine “common sense” means of explaining sexual violence is the ideologically facilitated tend...
One routine “common sense” means of explaining sexual violence is the ideologically facilitated tend...
Across England and Wales in the year 2017–18, the number of reported cases of rape in which a charge...
This study investigates the discursive patterns of interactions between police interviewers and wome...
This study investigates the discursive patterns of interactions between police interviewers and wome...
This article presents an analysis of the discursive construction of evidence in an English police in...
The methods used by the UK Police to investigate complaints of rape have unsurprisingly come under m...
This article explores why victim-survivors engage with the police by drawing upon the accounts of 24...
The methods used by the UK Police to investigate complaints of rape have unsurprisingly come under m...
Police interviewers find the investigation of sexual crimes ‘technically difficult’ and ‘stressful’ ...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Springer Nature via the DOI in this recordD...
Objective(s): To examine the variation in police officers’ initial judgements of responsibility and ...
Objective(s): To examine the variation in police officers’ initial judgements of responsibility and ...
Journal Article Anderson, I.; Beattie, G.; Spencer, C. (2001): Can blaming victims of rape be logica...
Victims of rape are uniquely vulnerable for being blamed for their assault relative to victims of ot...