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This book explores the role of self-medication in reflexive
response to victimhood and victim recovery. Based on interviews,
counsellor focus groups and a self-medication survey, it situates
self-medication among the coping strategies that may be set in
formal and informal networks. Victims primarily seek validation,
and this book reviews self-medication with particular focus on how
victim-survivors develop a variety of reflexive responses in their
attempt to carve out a dignified response to victimization.
Validation may be achieved through the pursuit of justice, but many
victims suffer from multiple or complex victimisation, with limited
social chances necessary to achieve a just outcome. Routines,
beliefs and an ordered pathway distinguish a dignified identity and
more or less successful recovery adaptations. This book also
addresses the practical implications of the findings for support
organisations.
When everyday social situations and cultural phenomena come to be
associated with a threat to security, security becomes a value
which competes with other values - particularly the right to
privacy and human rights. In this comparison, security appears as
an obvious choice over the loss of some aspects of other values and
is seen as a reasonable and worthwhile sacrifice because of what
security promises to deliver. When the value of security is
elevated to the top of the collective priorities, it becomes a
meta-frame, a reference point in relation to which other aspects of
social life are articulated and organized. With the tendency to
treat a variety of social issues as security threats and the
public's growing acceptance of surveillance as an inevitable form
of social control, the security meta-frame rises to the level of a
dominant organizing principle in such a way that it shapes the
parameters and the conditions of daily living. This volume offers
case studies from multiple countries that show how our private and
public life is shaped by the security meta-frame and surveillance.
It is essential reading for everyone who is interested in the
changes to be faced in social life, privacy, and human freedoms
during this age of security and surveillance.
When everyday social situations and cultural phenomena come to be
associated with a threat to security, security becomes a value
which competes with other values - particularly the right to
privacy and human rights. In this comparison, security appears as
an obvious choice over the loss of some aspects of other values and
is seen as a reasonable and worthwhile sacrifice because of what
security promises to deliver. When the value of security is
elevated to the top of the collective priorities, it becomes a
meta-frame, a reference point in relation to which other aspects of
social life are articulated and organized. With the tendency to
treat a variety of social issues as security threats and the
public's growing acceptance of surveillance as an inevitable form
of social control, the security meta-frame rises to the level of a
dominant organizing principle in such a way that it shapes the
parameters and the conditions of daily living. This volume offers
case studies from multiple countries that show how our private and
public life is shaped by the security meta-frame and surveillance.
It is essential reading for everyone who is interested in the
changes to be faced in social life, privacy, and human freedoms
during this age of security and surveillance.
This book adopts a critical criminological approach to analyze the
production, representation and role of crime in the emerging
international order. It analyzes the role of power and its
influence on the dynamics of criminalization at an international
level, facilitating an examination of the geopolitics of
international criminal justice. Such an approach to crime is
well-developed in domestic criminology; however, this critical
approach is yet to be used to explore the relationship between
power, crime and justice in an international setting. This book
brings together contrasting opinions on how courts, prosecutors,
judges, NGOs, and other bodies act to reflexively produce the
social reality of international justice. In doing this, it bridges
the gaps between the fields of sociology, criminology,
international relations, political science, and international law
to explore the problems and prospects of international criminal
justice and illustrate the role of crime and criminalization in a
complex, evolving, and contested international society.
This book explores the role of self-medication in reflexive
response to victimhood and victim recovery. Based on interviews,
counsellor focus groups and a self-medication survey, it situates
self-medication among the coping strategies that may be set in
formal and informal networks. Victims primarily seek validation,
and this book reviews self-medication with particular focus on how
victim-survivors develop a variety of reflexive responses in their
attempt to carve out a dignified response to victimization.
Validation may be achieved through the pursuit of justice, but many
victims suffer from multiple or complex victimisation, with limited
social chances necessary to achieve a just outcome. Routines,
beliefs and an ordered pathway distinguish a dignified identity and
more or less successful recovery adaptations. This book also
addresses the practical implications of the findings for support
organisations.
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