0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
  • R1,000 - R2,500 (1)
  • -
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 1 of 1 matches in All Departments

Taking the Stand - Rape Survivors and the Prosecution of Rapists (Hardcover): Amanda Konradi Taking the Stand - Rape Survivors and the Prosecution of Rapists (Hardcover)
Amanda Konradi
R1,812 Discovery Miles 18 120 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Rape is one of the most under-reported crimes in the U.S., and yet it is one of the most vicious, devastating, and violent of all crimes. But getting justice for victims has not always been easy. Often the victim is criminalized, demonized, sexualized, or otherwise attacked for her own part in the rape. But over the years, laws have changed and prosecuting rapists has become more common. Taking the Stand describes the criminal prosecution of rapists from the perspective of the women who survived their violence and explores if, when, and how the criminal justice process can work for them. Walking through the various responses rape victims have had to the criminal justice process, Konradi's vivid analysis provides new information to help raped women decide whether and how they should participate in prosecution, to help friends and family assist them, and to improve criminal justice practice for crime victims generally. Taking the Stand follows 47 rape survivors of varied ages and ethnicities, from the terror and trauma of rape through reporting to law enforcement, police investigation and indictment, hearings for probable cause and trials, plea bargaining, and sentencing. It focuses on women's experiences throughout the process and demonstrates how every experience is different. The problems that rape survivors face in the criminal justice process are not simply the result of the adversarial nature of court, defense tactics, or their own emotional reactions to violent sexual domination. Problems emerge from: (1) the social networks in which survivors are situated, (2) their variable access to emotional and financial resources, (3) their lack of knowledge about the formal and informalpractices of courtrooms, (4) their lack of structural power in the criminal justice process, and (5) standard procedures employed by prosecutors and police. By recognizing individual differences in rape survivors, and their rape experiences, criminal justice personnel can better serve victims, and by understanding the layers of criminal investigation and prosecution, survivors and their families can play a more active role on their own terms in an effort to bring about justice. A rape survivor herself, Konradi exposes in the raw language of the victims the very sensitive nature of the topic and the personal obstacles survivors face. By addressing each stage of the criminal justice process, she makes it easier for those who seek justice to make decisions and choose behaviors that will positively affect their outcomes and their personal experiences with the system.

Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
What We Build Up
Multiple Paperback R272 Discovery Miles 2 720
Sunshine and Shadow in New York
Matthew Hale Smith Paperback R816 Discovery Miles 8 160
Dogmatics in Outline
Karl Barth Hardcover R1,194 Discovery Miles 11 940
Christian Beliefs - Twenty Basics Every…
Wayne Grudem, Elliot Grudem Paperback R426 R385 Discovery Miles 3 850
The World's Greatest Love Letters
Various Authors Hardcover R294 R269 Discovery Miles 2 690
Questions of the Soul
Isaac Thomas Hecker Paperback R535 Discovery Miles 5 350
Captain America
Jack Kirby, Joe Simon, … Paperback R672 R594 Discovery Miles 5 940
I See Satan Fall Like Lightning
Rene Girard Paperback R581 R530 Discovery Miles 5 300
Different Coins in the Fountain - Volume…
Carlos V Cornejo Hardcover R705 Discovery Miles 7 050
Thoughts on Government - Occasioned by…
George Rous Paperback R374 Discovery Miles 3 740

 

Partners