Module Information

Module Identifier
LC20820
Module Title
Victimology
Academic Year
2020/2021
Co-ordinator
Semester
Semester 2
Exclusive (Any Acad Year)
Pre-Requisite
LC12220 or LC22220 or CT versions
Other Staff

Course Delivery

 

Assessment

Due to Covid-19 students should refer to the module Blackboard pages for assessment details

Assessment Type Assessment length / details Proportion
Semester Exam 2 Hours   unseen exam  50%
Semester Assessment Presentation  20 minutes and submission of electronic slides  50%
Supplementary Exam 2 Hours   unseen exam  50%
Supplementary Assessment Presentation  20 minutes and submission of electronic slides  50%

Learning Outcomes

On successful completion of this module students should be able to:

1. Demonstrate a sound awareness of and understanding of the major theories, perspectives and concepts in the study of victims and victimology.

2. Demonstrate a knowledge and understanding of how victimization is socially, politically and legally constructed and how this informs policies, practices and debates locally, nationally and internationally.

3. Apply criminological theory to various situations and reflect on and develop an understanding of the concepts, theories, policies and practices associated with victims and victimology.

4. Identify, explain and evaluate the role of victims within different official and unofficial presentations and be able to assess their impact on crime, enforcement, punishment and offenders as well as the impact of each of these on victims.

5. Explain and analyse a nuanced concept of the victim.

6. Demonstrate an understanding of the victim, their needs and their roles, from sociological and psychological perspectives.

Brief description

The module will consider the nature of victimhood both in legal and sociological terms. This will be done firstly from the standpoint of the victim and then from media or other popular positions. It will then explore and challenge some of the stereotypical conceptions of victimization through a consideration of a number of types of victim. Finally it will move on to the position of victims within the criminal justice system.

Content

Defining victims: Becoming a victim; Contested notions of victimhood; Limits of legal conceptions of victim - Zemiological and abolitionist considerations.

Perceptions of Victims: Legal; Media and popular culture; Offender.

Types of Victim: Rape - male and female victims; Domestic violence - male and female victims; Victims of state violence; Victims of terrorism; older victims; child victims.

Victim Participation: In the Exclusionary Criminal Justice System; Restorative Justice; The changing role of victims within the criminal justice system.

Consequences of Victim Centred Systems: The impact of victims on the criminal justice system; The impact of the criminal justice system on victims.

Module Skills

Skills Type Skills details
Application of Number Understanding and evaluating relevant quantitative research data will be a part of the module, at least in relation to certain theories.
Communication Oral communication skills will be encouraged and honed in seminars and also in lectures. Written communication skills will be practised through note taking both in lectures and private study and in formal submission of written work in examinations.
Improving own Learning and Performance Students will be expected to read selected texts and from these materials build on their lectures and test their own learning, especially in seminars. This will enable them to take more control over their learning and to locate problem areas which they will be supported in overcoming.
Information Technology Preparation for seminars, the presentation, and the examination will all require use of the library databases and other electronic databases. Students will be referred to useful urls and be encouraged to retrieve data electronically. Students will submit their assignment electronically, and present using an electronic poster.
Personal Development and Career planning Enhanced capacity for independent and critical thought. Good time-management skills in preparing for seminars and submitting work on time.
Problem solving Students will be studying legal, theoretical and sociological sources to ascertain how these interplay to solve some difficult issues of law and crime control.
Research skills Students will be expected to locate material both on line and in the library and to use these materials for: presentations, seminar preparations and examinations. They will be encouraged to develop individual research skills in order to perform these tasks effectively.
Subject Specific Skills
Team work As well as individual work, the seminars will involve team work tasks allowing students to support each other in interactive learning.

Notes

This module is at CQFW Level 5