Victimology of a Wrongful Conviction

Victimology of a Wrongful Conviction

Innocent Inmates and Indirect Victims

Campbell, Kathryn M.; Pate, Margaret; Jackson, Nicky Ali

Taylor & Francis Ltd

07/2022

162

Mole

Inglês

9780367637194

15 a 20 dias

344

Descrição não disponível.
Foreword by Lenore Walker
Preface by Jeffrey Mark Deskovic

Section I. Victimology: The Wrongly Convicted as Victims

1. Introduction: Definitions, Methodology, and Demographics

2. Victimology: Theoretical Perspectives and their Applications to the Wrongly Convicted

3. The Nature and Extent of Wrongful Convictions

4. Victimizing the Innocent: Racism, Wrongful Convictions, and Exonerations of Black Men in the Criminal Legal System

Section II. The Many Victims of a Wrongful Conviction

5. The Exoneree as Victim

6. Female Victims of a Wrongful Conviction: Continual Marginalization

7. Family as Victims of a Wrongful Conviction

8. Revictimization of the Original Victim

9. Society as a Victim of a Wrongful Conviction

10. Post-release Victimization: "Freedom is Never Free"

11. Final Thoughts and Future Considerations
Wrongful conviction;Miscarriage of justice;Exoneree;Victimology;Victims;Innocent prisoner;Social justice;Injustice;Prison;Incarceration;DNA Evidence;Innocent Inmates;Innocence Project;Secondary Victims;Crime Victims;False Confessions;DNA Exoneration;Younger Men;Criminal Justice System;Public Court Proceeding;Restorative Justice;Criminal Legal System;Lifestyle Exposure Theory;Data Set;Victim Precipitation Theory;Jailhouse Informants;National Academy;Pretrial Detention;Forensic Odontology;Person's DNA;DNA Testing;Sandra Bland;Exonerees Experience;Eyewitness Misidentification