Description
Test Bank for Victimology A Text/Reader 2nd Edition Daigle
Downloadable Instructor Test Bank for Victimology A Text/Reader 2nd Edition By Leah E. Daigle, ISBN: 9781506345215
Table Of Content
Section 1. Introduction to Victimology
The History of Victimology: Before the Victims’ Rights Movement |
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The Role of the Victim in Crime: Victim Precipitation, Victim Facilitation, and Victim Provocation |
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The History of Victimology: The Victims’ Rights Movement |
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Contributions of the Victims’ Rights Movement |
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Section 2. Extent, Theories, and Factors of Victimization
Theories and Explanations of Victimization |
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Reading 1: Specifying the Influence of Family and Peers on Violent Victimization: Extending Routine Activities and Lifestyles Theories by Christopher J. Shcreck and Bonnie S. Fisher |
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Reading 2: An Investigation of Neighborhood Disadvantage, Low Self-Control, and Violent Victimization Among Youth by Chris L. Gibson |
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Section. 3 Consequences of Victimization
Mental Health Consequences and Costs |
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Reading 3: Victimization, posttraumatic stress disorder symptomatology, and later nonsuicidal self-harm in a birth cohort by Shyamala Nada-Raja and Keren Skegg |
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Reading 4: The economic costs of partner violence and the cost-benefit of civil protective orders T K Logan, Robert Walker, and William Hoyt |
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Section 4. Recurring Victimization
Types of Recurring Victimization |
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Extent of Recurring Victimization |
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Characteristics of Recurring Victimization |
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Risk Factors for Recurring Victimization |
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Theoretical Explanations of Recurring Victimization |
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Consequences of Recurring Victimization |
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Responses to Recurring Victimization |
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Reading 5: The Violent and Sexual Victimization of College Women: Is Repeat Victimization a Problem? by Leah E. Daigle, Bonnie S. Fisher, and Francis T. Cullen |
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Reading 6: A networked boost: Burglary co-offending and repeat victimization using a network approach by Brendan Lantz and R. Barry Ruback |
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Section 5. Victims’ Rights and Remedies
Remedies and Rights in Court |
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Reading 7: Victim Rights and New Remedies: Finally Getting Victims Their Due by Robert C. Davis and Carrie Mulford |
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Reading 8: Delivering a victim impact statement: Emotionally effective or counter-productive? by Kim ME Lens, Antony Pemberton, Karen Brans, Johan Braeken, Stefan Bogaerts, and Esmah Lahlah |
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Section 6. Homicide Victimization – Contributed by Lisa Muftic
Defining Homicide Victimization |
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Measurement and Extent of Homicide Victimization |
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Risk Factors for and Characteristics of Homicide Victimization |
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Different Types of Homicide Victimization |
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Indirect (Secondary) Victimization |
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Legal and Community Responses to Homicide Victimization |
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Reading 9: Co-victims of homicide: A systematic review of the literature by Jennifer Connolly and Ronit Gordon |
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Reading 10: Victim lifestyle as a correlate of homicide clearance by Jason Rydberg and Jesenia M. Pizarro |
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Section 7. Sexual Victimization
What Is Sexual Victimization? |
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Measurement and Extent of Sexual Victimization |
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Risk Factors for and Characteristics of Sexual Victimization |
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Responses to Sexual Victimization |
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Consequences of Sexual Victimization |
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Special Case: Sexual Victimization of Males |
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Legal and Criminal Justice Responses to Sexual Victimization |
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Prevention and Intervention |
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Reading 11: Alcohol expectancy, drinking behavior, and sexual victimization among female and male college students by Kimberly A. Tyler, Rachel M. Schmitz, and Scott A. Adams |
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Reading 12: The Effectiveness of Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner (SANE) Programs: A Review of Psychological, Medical, Legal, and Community Outcomes by cca Campbell, Debra Patterson, and Lauren F. Lichty |
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Section 8. Intimate Partner Violence
Defining Intimate Partner Violence and Abuse |
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Risk Factors and Theories for Intimate Partner Violence |
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Consequences of Intimate Partner Violence |
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Why Abusive Relationships Continue |
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Criminal Justice System Responses to Intimate Partner Violence |
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Legal and Community Responses |
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Reading 13: Conflict and Control: Gender Symmetry and Asymmetry in Domestic Violence by Michael Johnson |
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Reading 14: Intimate partner violence and the victim-offender overlap by Marie Skubak Tillyer and Emily M. Wright |
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Reading 15: Voices of strength and resistance: A contextual and longitudinal analysis of women’s responses to battering by Jacquelyn Campbell, Linda Rose, Joan Kub, and Daphne Nedd |
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Section 9. Victimization at the Beginning and End of Life: Child and Elder Abuse
Reading 16: Child abuse and neglect, developmental role attainment, and adult arrests by Maureen A. Allwood and Cathy Spatz Widom |
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Reading 17: The Epidemiology of Violence Against the Elderly: Implications for Primary and Secondary Prevention by Ronet Bachman and Michelle L. Meloy |
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Section 10. Victimization at School and Work
Victimization at School: Grades K–12 |
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Victimization at School: College |
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Reading 18: Traditional Bullying, Cyber Bullying, and Deviance: A General Strain Theory Approach by Carter Hay, Ryan Meldrum, and Karen Mann |
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Reading 19: A Multidimensional Examination of Campus Safety: Victimization, Perceptions of Danger, Worry About Crime, and Precautionary Behavior Among College Women in the Post-Clery Era by Pamela Wilcox, Carol E. Jordan, and Adam J. Pritchard |
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Section 11. Property and Identity Theft Victimization
Reading 20: Linking Burglary and Target Hardening at the Property Level: New Insights Into Victimization and Burglary Protection by Alex Hirschfield, Andrew Newton, and Michelle Rogerson |
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Reading 21: Online routines and identify theft victimization: Further expanding routine activity theory beyond direct-contact offenses by Bradford W. Reyns |
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Section 12. Victimization of Special Populations
Victimization of Persons With Disabilities |
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Patterns of Victimization |
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Risk Factors for Victimization for Persons With Disabilities |
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Responses to Victims With Disabilities |
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Victimization of Persons With Mental Illness |
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Victimization of the Incarcerated |
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Reading 22: Partner Violence Against Women with Disabilities: Prevalence, Risk, and Explanations by Douglas A. Brownridge |
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Reading 23: Mental Disorder and Violent Victimization: The Mediating Role of Involvement in Conflicted Social Relationships by Eric Silver |
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Reading 24: Examining the effects of witnessing victimization while incarcerated on offender reentry by Jane C. Daquin, Leah E. Daigle, and Shelley Johnson Listwan |
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Section 13. Victimology from a Comparative Perspective – Contributed by Lisa Muftic
Victimology Across the Globe |
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Measurement and Extent of Victimization Across the Globe |
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Justice System Responses to Victimization |
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Victims’ Rights and Assistance Programs |
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Reading 25: The International Crime Victims Survey: A retrospective by John van Kesteren, Jan van Dijk, and Pat Mayhew |
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Reading 26: A systematic review of prevalence and risk factors for elder abuse in Asia by Elsie Yan, Ko-Ling Chan, and Agnes Tiwari |
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Section 14. Contemporary Issues in Victimology: Victims of Hate Crimes, Human Trafficking, and Terrorism
Victims of Human Trafficking |
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Reading 27: Hate Crimes and Stigma-Related Experiences Among Sexual Minority Adults in the United States: Prevalence Estimates From a National Probability Sample by Gregory M. Herek |
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Reading 28: Challenges to identifying and prosecuting sex trafficking cases in the Midwest United States by Andrea J. Nichols and Erin C. Heil |
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Reading 29: Does watching the news affect fear of terrorism? The importance of media exposure on terrorism fear by Ashley Marie Nellis and Joanne Savage |