Sandra Walklate is Eleanor Rathbone Chair of Sociology at Liverpool University. In 2016 she was appointed as conjoint Professor of Criminology at the University of Monash, Melbourne, Australia, working with colleagues there as part of their Gender and Family Violence Research Focus Program. She also holds an adjunct professorial role at the Queensland University of Technology (QUT), Brisbane, Australia (2015-2018).
Introduction and Overview (Sandra Walklate)
Part I: Perspectives on Victims and Victimisation
Introduction to Part I (Sandra Walklate)
1. A Question of History (Barry Godfrey)
2. Theoretical Perspectives on Victimisation (Paul Rock)
3. The social epidemiology of crime victimization: The paradox of prevention (Tim Hope)
4. The Impact of Crime: Victimisation, Harm and Resilience (Simon Green and Anthony Pemberton)
Part II: Victims, Victimology and 'Difference'
Introduction to Part II (Sandra Walklate)
5. Feminist Voices, Gender and Victimisation (Pamela Davies)
6. Child Victims of Human Rights Violation (Elizabeth Stanley)
7. Victims of Hate Crime (Neil Chakraborti)
8. Sexuality and victimisation (Leslie J Moran)
9. Intersectionality and Victimisation (Patrina Duhaney)
Part III: Policy Directions and Service Delivery
Introduction to Part III (Sandra Walklate)
10. Interventions and services for victims of crime (Joanna Shapland)
11. The victim in court (Samantha Fairclough and Imogen Jones)
12. Restorative Justice and Victims of Crime: Directions and developments (Meredith Rossner)
13. Theorising victimisation through the individual and collective reparations programs for Indian Residential School abuse (Konstantin Petroukhov)
Part IV: Comparative Perspectives
Introduction to Part IV (Sandra Walklate)
14. A glass half full, or half empty? On the implementation of the EU's Victims Directive regarding police reception and specialized support (Jan Van Dijk and Marc Groenhuijsen)
15. Victims support in policy and legal process in Australia: Still an ambivalent and contested space (Tracey Booth and Kerry Carrington)
16. Looking into Asia: Managing crime through victim policy? (Susyan Jou and Bill Hebenton)
Part V: Other Visions of Victims and Victimology
Introduction to Part V (Sandra Walklate)
17. Crime as a Social Relation of Power: Reframing the 'Ideal Victim' of Corporate Crimes (David Whyte)
18. We Are All Complicit: Victimization and Crimes of the Powerful (Dawn L. Rothe and David Kauzlarich)
19. Cultural Victimology Revisited: Synergies of Risk, Fear and Resilience (Gabe Mythen and Will McGowan)
Conclusion: Developing an agenda for a (critical) victimology (Sandra Walklate)
Building on the success of the previous edition, this book will provide an international focus on cutting-edge issues in the field of victimology and will feature new chapters on intersectionality, sexuality, crimes of the powerful and hate crime, as well as psychological perspectives.