This paper examines the recent trends in regional and international tribunals that relate to the position of the victim in the criminal process. Recent decisions in both the European Court of Human Rights and other international tribunals have illustrated a new and progressive attitude towards the role of the crime victim. This can be attributed, in part, to the breakdown of the public/ private divide in human rights law and the mutually expanding parameters of both human rights discourse and criminal law. It is argued here that cross-fertilisation between these disciplines, which is widely evident in current policy making and judicial decision-making, has meant that the traditional failures of human rights law and the criminal law to prote...
Today the science and practice of contemporary crime, the perpetrator and the victim are treated as ...
The EU legislator has been accused of overemphasizing the repressive aspect of law enforcement, whil...
peer-reviewedThe full text of this article will not be available in ULIR until the embargo expires o...
Victims in common law jurisdictions have traditionally been unable to participate in criminal trials...
Across Europe, the position of the victim within criminal justice procedure is being reconsidered an...
In early 2006, the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights called for more detailed researc...
This book traces victims’ active participatory rights through different procedural stages in adversa...
peer-reviewedThe victim of crime1 is not an active participant per se in the criminal justice system...
peer-reviewedThere has been growing recognition of the interests and needs of victims in the law are...
As our understanding of human rights have become more developed two significant changes have occurre...
This thesis critically examines the role, scope and implications of victims' participation in intern...
Recent years have seen a number of developments pertaining to the notion that victims should be affo...
In recent years, victims’ rights have gained a central place in the academic and policy reflections ...
The participation of victims in criminal proceedings is a controversial issue which lies at the core...
Historically, victims of crimes were key participants in the prosecution of crimes around the globe....
Today the science and practice of contemporary crime, the perpetrator and the victim are treated as ...
The EU legislator has been accused of overemphasizing the repressive aspect of law enforcement, whil...
peer-reviewedThe full text of this article will not be available in ULIR until the embargo expires o...
Victims in common law jurisdictions have traditionally been unable to participate in criminal trials...
Across Europe, the position of the victim within criminal justice procedure is being reconsidered an...
In early 2006, the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights called for more detailed researc...
This book traces victims’ active participatory rights through different procedural stages in adversa...
peer-reviewedThe victim of crime1 is not an active participant per se in the criminal justice system...
peer-reviewedThere has been growing recognition of the interests and needs of victims in the law are...
As our understanding of human rights have become more developed two significant changes have occurre...
This thesis critically examines the role, scope and implications of victims' participation in intern...
Recent years have seen a number of developments pertaining to the notion that victims should be affo...
In recent years, victims’ rights have gained a central place in the academic and policy reflections ...
The participation of victims in criminal proceedings is a controversial issue which lies at the core...
Historically, victims of crimes were key participants in the prosecution of crimes around the globe....
Today the science and practice of contemporary crime, the perpetrator and the victim are treated as ...
The EU legislator has been accused of overemphasizing the repressive aspect of law enforcement, whil...
peer-reviewedThe full text of this article will not be available in ULIR until the embargo expires o...