Victimology Flashcards
Positivist victimology
- Aims to identify the factors that produce statistical patterns in victimisation – especially those that make some individuals or groups more likely to be victims
- It aims to identify victims who have contributed to their own victimisation
Seeks to identify the social & psychological characteristics of victims that make them different from, & more vulnerable than, non-victims. The implication is that the victims in some sense ‘invite’ victimisation by being the kind of person that they are or by the actions they may take & can include lifestyle factors such as victims who show-off their wealth.
Positivist evaluation
Important in identifying broad patterns of crime & for highlighting the problem of victimisation in certain types of offence – e.g. domestic violence against women.
🗷 Ignores wider structural factors influencing victimisation, such as poverty & patriarchy that conflict theories such as Marxism or feminism would point out.
🗷 It can easily tip over into victim blaming. E.g. the idea that rape victims ‘asked for it
Liberal victimology
In contrast, liberal victimologists focus on all victims of crime, regardless of social characteristics. Negative attitudes experienced by someone, such as a rape victim, at the hands of the police or a judge, after suffering the primary victimisation of the offence itself, is called secondary victimisation. Waves of harm are also a focus, as crimes affect not only the victim but also families & friends, & sometimes terrorise the public too.
Liberal victimologists also study hidden types of criminal victimisation, such as victims of fraud & corporate crime including bank customers, employees & tenants. They are interested in making the victim feel better through actions such as restorative justice.
Liberal evaluation
Considers how someone can be a victim twice due to the CJS & how it is often not just the direct victim that can be affected by a crime, but also their family & friends.
🗹 Offers positive ways in which justice can be restorative, rather than simply retributive.
Critical (or Radical) victimology
Based on conflict theories such as Marxism & feminism, & shares the same approach as critical criminology. These approaches are critical of positivist criminology for taking a too narrow & uncritical view of victims. It focuses on two elements: • They suggest that more account needs to be taken of structural factors, such patriarchy & poverty, which place powerless groups such as women & the poor at greater risk of victimisation (a form of structural powerlessness). E.g. positivist victimologists might reveal that women & the working-class are more likely to be victims of particular types of crime, but they don’t tell you why this is the case, because they don’t discuss the structure of society.
• They point to the state’s power to apply or deny the label of victim – ‘victim’ is a social construct in the same way as ‘crime’ & ‘criminal’. Through the CJS, the state applies the label of victim to some but withholds it from others – e.g. when police decide not to press charges against a man for assaulting his wife, thereby denying her victim status. This helps to hide the crimes of more powerful people in society & denies the powerless victims any right to justice.
Radical evaluation
It is valuable in drawing attention to the way that ‘victim’ status is constructed by power & how this benefits the powerful as the expense of the powerless.
🗷 Disregards the role victims may play in bringing victimisation on themselves through their own choices (e.g. not making their home secure) or their own offending.