000 02879nam a22003737a 4500
999 _c9175
_d9175
005 20250625151726.0
008 250325s2024 -nz|| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _aAFVC
100 _aTompson, Lisa
_912617
245 _aUnderstanding re-victimisation through an intersectional lens
_cLisa Tompson, Apriel Jolliffe-Simpson, Richard Wortley, Bridget O'Keeffe and Devon Polaschek
260 _bTe Puna Haumaru | New Zealand Institute for Security and Crime Science, Te Whare Wānanga o Waikato \ The University of Waikato,
_c2024
300 _aelectronic document (105 pages) ; PDF file
520 _aPolicy efforts based on evidence about risk for re-victimisation both protect some of the most vulnerable people in society and have a good chance of reducing crime levels overall (Farrell and Pease, 1993; Grove et al., 2012; Pease et al., 2018). While research has established that the phenomenon of re-victimisation is ubiquitous, less is known about what makes some people more vulnerable to re-victimisation than others (Hamilton and Browne, 1998; Nazaretian and Fitch, 2021). Enhanced understanding of who these people are is thus crucial for developing contemporary victim-centred crime prevention policy. Victimology theories suggest that people at high risk of victimisation are typified by multiple overlapping and intersecting personal characteristics (e.g., gender, age, race/ethnicity, class, disability status, sexual identity), rather than forming homogeneous higher-order groups (e.g., delineated by a single personal c aracteristic; Shoham et al, 2010; Walklate, 2012). Accordingly, in this study we examined socio-demographic characteristics (e.g., gender, age, ethnicity, disability status, sexual identity) of people who were re-victimised, with an emphasis on intersectionality1. That is, we focused on identifying where the co-occurrence of socio-demographic characteristics intensified risk of re-victimisation. (From the overview). Record #9175
650 4 _9163
_aASSAULT
650 4 _aCRIME
_9163
650 4 _aDATA ANALYSIS
_9181
650 4 _aHARA
_95622
650 4 _aINTERSECTIONALITY
_96433
650 0 _98113
_aNEW ZEALAND CRIME AND VICTIMS SURVEY (NZCVS)
650 0 _aPĀRURENGA
_92626
650 0 _aRISK FACTORS
_9505
650 0 _aSEXUAL VIOLENCE
_9531
650 0 _aTATAURANGA
_9598
650 0 _aTAITŌKAI
_95943
650 4 _aVICTIMS OF CRIMES
_9623
651 _aNEW ZEALAND
_92588
700 _910834
_aJolliffe Simpson, Apriel D.
700 _93036
_aWortley, Richard
700 _aO'Keeffe, Bridget
_913810
700 _91925
_aPolaschek, Devon L. L.
856 _uhttps://hdl.handle.net/10289/17119
_zAccess online
856 _uhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oxc8ItvbpBs&list=PL5awdav3cpdooyhh5jf4dMGr7AOFczBt7&index=1
_zWatch recorded webinar on YouTube
942 _2ddc
_cREPORT
_hnews133