Kirchengast | Victimology and Victim Rights | E-Book | sack.de
E-Book

E-Book, Englisch, 278 Seiten

Kirchengast Victimology and Victim Rights

International Comparative Perspectives
1. Auflage 2016
ISBN: 978-1-317-00229-1
Verlag: CRC Press
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)

International Comparative Perspectives

E-Book, Englisch, 278 Seiten

ISBN: 978-1-317-00229-1
Verlag: CRC Press
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)



This book provides an international comparative analysis of victim rights' frameworks. The text presents comparative materials on victim rights, laws and policies in Australia, the UK, US, Canada, New Zealand, Ireland, India, Japan, and South Africa, Brazil and includes the continental European approaches, for example, the inquisitorial countries of Germany and France are compared with the mixed adversarial and inquisitorial systems of Sweden, Austria, and the Netherlands. The jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights is seminal as a stand-alone body of work on the rights of victims, and as it applies to the existing legal record of the countries examined. International law, specifically the rights of victims before the International Criminal Court, and before tribunals such as those in the Extraordinary Chambers of the Courts of Cambodia, the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia and the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, are also covered. The main argument advanced by this book is that there is increasing international convergence regarding the integration and support of the victim in both law and policy. Boundaries which were once cited as distinguishing one system of justice from another - adversarial versus inquisitorial, constitutional versus common law, code versus common law - are being slowly dismantled by statutory and policy amendment to afford victims a greater role in government decision-making, in legal proceedings, as community stakeholders, and as individuals with enforceable rights.

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Table of Contents

List of Abbreviations *

List of International Instruments *

List of Statutes *

List of Cases *

List of Tables *

Preface *

Part I - Victimology and Victim Rights in Comparative Contexts *

Chapter One: Victim Issues in International Law and Context *

Introduction *

A Multi-Jurisdictional Approach *

Law and Policy/Law or Policy *

Victimology and Victim Rights *

The Rise of Victimology and the Development of Human Rights *

Positivist Victimology and the Present: The Victim’s Voice, Struggles with Local Suffering and the Positivist Agenda *

Normative Stakeholders of Law and Justice *

The Continental European Approach *

Ratification on the Domestic Level: Law, Policy and the Victim *

Reshaping the Roles of Justice Stakeholders *

International, Regional and Domestic Reform: Law and Policy *

Notes *

Chapter Two: International Norms in Victimology and Victim Rights *

Introduction *

International Norms of Victim Rights *

Fair, Courteous and Respectful Treatment *

Information and to be Kept Informed *

Relevant Support Services *

Protection from the Accused and Others *

Participatory, Procedural and Substantive Rights *

Fair Trial Rights *

Access to Compensation, Restitution and Reparations *

Restorative Intervention and Therapeutic Justice *

Domestic Ratification *

Without Prejudice to the Offender *

Normative Victim Rights in Context: Positive State Obligations and Fair Trial Rights in International Law and Policy *

Realising the Centrality of the Victim: Positive Obligations to Protect Victim Rights *

Fair Trial Rights in Context: Equality of Arms in International Law *

Notes *

Chapter Three: Comparative Issues and Perspectives *

Introduction *

Inculcating International Standards in Law and Policy *

Ratification of International Declarations and Instruments *

Policy Transfer of International Standards *

Dismantling Adversarial/Inquisitorial Boundaries *

Hybrid Systems: Criminal Law, Criminal Justice and Mixed Systems of Administration *

Law Reform Processes *

Commissions of Inquiry *

Emerging International Reforms in Law and Policy *

Trial Participation and the Right to be Consulted *

Counsel for Victims of Crime *

Substantive and Enforceable Rights for Victims of Crime *

Restorative Justice *

Therapeutic Justice *

A Focus on Reparations *

Compensation and Restitution *

Notes *

Part II - The Victim in Internationalised Systems of Criminal Justice *

Chapter Four: Victims in International Law and Policy *

Introduction *

Supra-National Bodies *

United Nations Declarations *

Treaty Monitoring Bodies *

International Courts and Tribunals *

Ad hoc Tribunals: The Nuremberg and Tokyo Tribunals, the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, and the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda *

The International Criminal Court *

Domestic Courts Under International Law *

Extraordinary Chambers of the Courts of Cambodia *

Special Panels of East Timor (Timor Leste) *

Internationalised Panels in Kosovo *

Notes *

Chapter Five: Victims in Regional Law and Policy *

Introduction *

Council of Europe, the European Commission and the European Union *

The European Court of Justice *

The European Court of Human Rights *

The European Union and Victim Rights in Focus *

Notes *

Chapter Six: Victims in Domestic Law and Policy *

Introduction *

Inquisitorial Systems *

Germany *

France *

Mixed Inquisitorial/Adversarial Systems *

Sweden *

The Netherlands *

Austria *

Adversarial Systems *

England and Wales *

Scotland *

Ireland *

United Sates of America *

Australia *

Canada *

New Zealand *

India *

South Africa *

Mixed and Hybrid Systems *

Japan *

Brazil *

Notes *

Part III – Victims in Law and Policy: Discord and Debate *

Chapter Seven: Victim Rights in Law and Policy *

Introduction *

International and Regional Instruments and the Domestic Reform Process *

Hard Law/Soft Law in Domestic Contexts *

The Limits of Public Policy *

Victim Rights and the Reluctance of Normative Stakeholders *

Notes *

Chapter Eight: Victim Rights in the Twenty-First Century: Intervention and Innovation *

Introduction *

The Promise of Victimology Realised? *

References *


Dr Tyrone Kirchengast is a Senior Lecturer in the Faculty of Law at UNSW. He is admitted as a legal practitioner of the Supreme Court of NSW and is a barrister and solicitor of the High Court of Australia. Before joining the Faculty of Law, he lectured at the University of Newcastle, and Macquarie University, Australia. His principal teaching and research interests are in criminal law and procedure and his publications focus on the integration of victim interests within criminal law. His recent work focuses on the role of victim impact statements in sentencing homicide offenders; the rise of victim lawyers and the integration of victims into adversarial proceedings; and victim rights as human rights under the European Convention on Human Rights and before the International Criminal Court. He has published widely on victim rights.



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