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This chapter explores the various problems faced by crime victims, including economic losses, system abuse, long-term stress, antisocial behavior, and the nature of victimization. It also discusses victim characteristics, repeat victimization, and theories of victimization.
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Chapter 3 Victims and Victimization
Problems of Crime Victims • Victimization costs include: damaged property, pain and suffering, and the involvement of police and other agencies of the justice system
Problems of Crime Victims • Website link: http://www.ncvc.org/ncvc
Problems of Crime Victims • Economic Loss: • Problems of Crime Victims • Violent crime by juveniles costs $158 billion per year • Total economic costs of crime amounts to $450 billion annually • The costs of crime for each U.S. citizen is $1,800 annually • Victims suffer long term losses in earnings and occupational attainment • Research suggests crime victims during adolescence earn about $82,000 less than nonvictims
Problems of Crime Victims • System Abuse • Callous handling of victims by police • Holding of personal property for evidence • Rape victims report feeling “re-raped” • Economic hardships due to trials
Problems of Crime Victims • Long Term Stress • Posttraumatic stress disorders (PTSD) • Lowering of self-esteem • Increased risk of suicide • Eating disorders • Obsessive-Compulsive Disorders • Victimization lead to some people feeling timid and cautious • Fear of a repeat attack • Suffer psychological stress for longer periods of time
Problems of Crime Victims • Antisocial Behavior • Victims are more likely to commit crimes themselves • Being abused increases the odds of one being arrested (cycle of violence) • Both males and females are affected by the cycle of violence
The Nature of Victimization • Crime rates have been declining • The violent victimization rate decreased 54 percent • The property crime victimization rate decreased 50 percent
The Nature of Victimization • The social ecology of victimization • Violent crimes are more likely to occur in open public areas during daytime or early evening hours • Almost two-thirds of more serious crimes such as rape occur after 6 P.M. • Inner-city inhabitants have a greater chance of being victimized than suburbanites
The Nature of Victimization • The Victim’s Household • Larger, African American, Western, and urban homes are the most vulnerable to crime • Recent declines in victimization may be explained by smaller households in less populated areas due to movement from urban areas
The Nature of Victimization • Victim Characteristics • Gender: • Males are more likely to be victims of violent crime than females, except for rape and sexual assault • Females are more likely to be victimized by someone they know, whereas males are more likely to be victimized by strangers • Age: • Young people are more at risk of victimization than older people • People over 65 only account for 1 percent of violent victimizations (most being frauds and scams)
The Nature of Victimization • Social Status • Poor people are more likely to experience violent and property crime • The wealthy are more likely to be targets of personal theft crimes
The Nature of Victimization • Marital Status • Never-married people are more likely to be victimized than married people • Widows and widowers have the lowest victimization rate
The Nature of Victimization • Race and Ethnicity • African Americans more likely to be victims of violent crime than European Americans • Minorities experience income inequality in greater number than European Americans
The Nature of Victimization • Repeat Victimization • Individuals who have been a crime victim have a significantly higher chance of future victimization • Characteristics which increase potential for victimization • Target vulnerability • Target gratifiability • Target antagonism
The Nature of Victimization • The Victims and Their Criminals • Males are more likely to be violently victimized by a stranger • Females are more likely to be victimized by a friend or intimate • Crime is intraracial: Blacks victimize Blacks and Whites victimize Whites • Substance abuse is involved in about one-third of violent crime incidents • Women are more likely to be both robbed and raped by known acquaintances
Theories of Victimization • Victim Precipitation Theory – some people may actually initiate the confrontation that leads to their injury or death. • Active precipitation – victim acts provocatively (Menachem Amir 1971) • Passive precipitation – occurs when victim exhibits some personal characteristics that unknowingly either threatens or encourages the attacker.
Theories of Victimization • Lifestyle Theory – certain lifestyles increase exposure to criminal offenders. • Being in a public place late at night • Living in an urban area • High-risk lifestyles (i.e. drinking, drug using) • Criminal lifestyle such as carrying weapons and belonging to gangs
Theories of Victimization • Deviant Place Theory • Victim prone to victimization because one resides in a socially disorganized high-crime area • The more often victims visit dangerous places, the more likely they will be exposed to crime and violence • Deviant places include: poor densely populated areas, highly transient neighborhoods and commercial areas with residential property in close proximity • William Julius Wilson suggests White residents flee high-crime areas, leaving racial minorities behind to suffer high victimization rates
Theories of Victimization • Routine Activity Theory • Victimization results from the interaction of everyday factors • Availability of suitable targets • Absence of capable guardians • Presence of motivated offenders • People who live in “hot spots” elevate their chances of victimization • Some criminologists suggest moral guardianship might cause some people to refrain from crime if they are bonded with conventional attitudes (peer rejection) • Ronald Clarke contends the relationship among opportunity, routine activities, and environmental factors increases victimization potential
Caring for the Victim • Victimization surveys indicate almost every American will become a victim of a common law crime • Helping the victim cope is the responsibility of all of society
Caring for the Victim • The Government’s Response • Task Force on Victim’s of Crime created in 1982 to provide recommendations for victim assistance • In 1984 The Comprehensive Crime Control Act and the Victims of Crime Act authorized federal funding for state victim compensation
Caring for the Victim • Victim Service Programs • An estimated 2,000 victim-witness assistance programs have been developed • Victim compensation: to pay for damages associated with crime ($100 to $15,000) • Court services: to help prepare victims and witnesses for court testimony • Public education: to familiarize the general public with primary prevention programs • Crisis intervention: Networks of social service agencies to provide emergency and long term assistance • Victim-offender reconciliation programs: use of mediators for face-to-face encounters between victims and perpetrators • Victim impact statements: allows victims the opportunity to describe their ordeal
Caring for the Victim • Victims’ Rights • Legal scholars have suggested crime victims have legal rights and society is obliged to ensure basic rights for law-abiding citizens • Thirty-three states have added victim’s rights amendments to their constitutions • A national Constitutional Amendment has been debated but has not yet passed Congress • In 2004, the Senate passed S.2329 a bill to provide rights to federal victims of crime, which does not change the Constitution
Caring for the Victim • Victim Advocacy • Advocates provide assistance to crime victims by interacting with police, courts, and legal aid • Advocates may assist in the writing of victim statements for various legal proceedings such as sentencing and probation/parole hearings. • Advocates may interact with media trying to ensure reporting is accurate and that privacy is not violated
Caring for the Victim • Self-Protection • Target hardening involves making one’s home and business crime proof • Use of fences, guards, surveillance cameras, window bars, warning signs, and dogs • Gary Kleck suggests armed victims kill between 1,500 and 2,800 potential felons each year
Caring for the Victim • Community Organization • Neighborhood watch programs • Community newsletters • Home security surveys • Lighting projects