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Victimizer, Victim and Self-Victimization : Thomas Pynchon's V.

open access: yesVictimizer, Victim and Self-Victimization : Thomas Pynchon's V.
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Is a victim a victim a victim?

Criminal Justice Matters, 1997
Comparative research, as is well known, is thwart with difficulties. Give those difficulties Nelken (1994) is right to ask the question, ‘What is the point of doing research in comparative criminology?’ The same question might well be asked of victimology.
Sandra Walklate, Rob Allan
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Childhood Victimization and Crime Victimization

Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 2010
The purpose of this study is to determine whether abused and neglected children are at increased risk for subsequent crime victimization. We ask four basic questions: (a) Does a history of child abuse/neglect increase one’s risk of physical, sexual, and property crime victimization?
Jared Kean, McIntyre, Cathy Spatz, Widom
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The process of victimization: The victims' perspective

Child Abuse & Neglect, 1990
Twenty-three child victims (aged 10-18 years) of childhood sexual abuse were interviewed about the victimization process, the person who abused them, and how abuse might have been prevented. Specific questions obtained information about the quality of the relationship between victim and offender, the offender's pre-abuse behavior, the explanation for ...
L, Berliner, J R, Conte
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Profiles of non‐victims, escaped victims, continuing victims and new victims of school bullying

British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2004
Background: Victims of school bullying are known to be at risk in peer relationships and to sometimes use ineffective coping strategies, but little previous research has examined differences among escaped victims, continuing victims and new victims.
Smith, PK   +4 more
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Victim to Victimizer

Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 1989
Victims of childhood sexual abuse may experience many dysfunctional outcomes. One negative outcome may be an increased risk of the sexually abused becoming sexually abusive to others. This article suggests that experience in the treatment of sexual offenders may have important implications for how we treat victims of child sexual abuse in order to ...
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"A victim is a victim"

2018
LGBT victims of crime underutilize the services available through victim assistance systems, for reasons such as fear of secondary victimization, perceived heteronormativity of the organization, and perceived insensitivity to their needs (Duke & Davidson, 2009; Faulkner, 2001; Hamberger et al., 2004; Hamberger, 1996).
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Are you a victim of the victim syndrome?

Organizational Dynamics, 2012
People who suffer from the victim syndrome are always complaining about the 'bad things that happen' in their lives. Because they believe they have no control over the way events unfold, they don’t feel a sense of responsibility for them. One moment, they present themselves dramatically as victims; the next, they morph into victimizers, hurting the ...
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