72 research outputs found
Posttraumatische stressstoornis en detentie: De strafrechter en het waarborgen van de strafdoelen speciale preventie en resocialisatie bij de vrijheidsbeneming van getraumatiseerde daders
Criminal Justice: Legitimacy, accountability, and effectivit
Evaluating the reliability of expert evidence in compensation procedures: Are diagnosticians influenced by the narrative fallacy when assessing the psychological injuries of trauma victims?
Criminal Justice: Legitimacy, accountability, and effectivit
Selection Processes in Prison-Based Treatment Referrals: A Street-Level Bureaucracy Perspective
Criminal Justice: Legitimacy, accountability, and effectivit
Crime victims’ evaluations of procedural justice and police performance in relation to cooperation: a qualitative study in the Netherlands
Previous research suggests that perceived negative treatment by police officers may have consequences for victims’ willingness to share information with the police. This might explain why particularly repeat victims are less likely to cooperate with the police. The current study explores why this would be true by conducting in-depth interviews with 32 crime victims who had recently reported their victimisation of property crime or violent crime to the police. Results indicate that victims of both types of crime had similar thoughts on what was deemed fair treatment. Victims who were deeply touched by the crime and/or the offender thought it was also important that the police took a clear-stance against the crime. While rapid case handling seemed to be more important for property crime victims than police officers’ investigative actions and the outcome, victims of violent crime expected the police to find the offender to make it clear to the offender that such (law-breaking) behaviour was not tolerated. When victims of violent crime felt that the police had failed in this task, they would feel abandoned by the police. This feeling had not only negative consequences for these victims’ willingness to cooperate, but could even lead to feelings of vigilantism, particularly among victims of violent crime who knew their offender. Implications for policy and future research are discussed.NWOCriminal Justice: Legitimacy, accountability, and effectivit
Street-level bureaucracy en verwijzingen naar gedragsinterventies in Nederlandse Penitentiaire Inrichtingen: Discrepanties tussen beleid en praktijk
Criminal Justice: Legitimacy, accountability, and effectivit
Opening the black box of judicial decision-making in cases with forensic mental health reports: a qualitative study from the Netherlands
Criminal Justice: Legitimacy, accountability, and effectivit
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