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Reconceptualizing critical victimology: interventions and possibilities

Ballinger, Anette(Contributions by)Chakraborti, Neil(Contributions by)Condry, Rachel(Contributions by)Elias, Robert(Contributions by)Gallo, Carina(Contributions by)Katz, Rebecca(Contributions by)Lippens, Ronnie(Contributions by)McConnachie, Kirsten(Contributions by)McEvoy, Kieran(Contributions by)McGarry, Ross(Contributions by)Miers, David(Contributions by)Patterson, Jillian(Contributions by)Shute, Jon(Contributions by)Spencer, Dale(Contributions by)Walklate, Sandra(Contributions by)Willis, Hannah(Contributions by)Spencer, Dale(Edited by)Walklate, Sandra(Edited by)
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Since the 1960s, the field of victimology has developed into a variegated discipline with its own theoretical and methodological traditions. In the early 1990s two texts were published—Towards a Critical Victimology(Fattah, 1992) andCritical Victimology(Mawby and Walklate, 1994)—that concretized critical victimology as a paradigm within victimology. Since then, the field has remained conceptually stale and with few a few exceptions there has not been a considerable lacuna of works from a critical perspective.Reconceptualizing Critical Victimology: Interventions and Possibilitiesprovides a rejoinder to the two aforementioned texts and demonstrate how critical victimology can be reconceptualized, where interventions can be made in this victimological paradigm, and possibilities for future theorizing and research in this provocative field.Reconceptualizing Critical Victimologyincludes eleven papers on the forms of victimization and issues pertinent to victims written by leading and emerging international scholars in the field of critical victimology. It is interdisciplinary in scope and contains contributions from leading and emergent international scholars on victims and victimization.Reconceptualizing Critical Victimologyserves as a crucible to demonstrate the complexities of and the multitude of factors that interact to complicate victim status, the vagaries of victim response, and the phenomenology of violence and victimization.

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Product Details
Lexington Books
1498510272 / 9781498510271
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
362.88
13/04/2016
English
261 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
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