Rural Victims of Crime: Representations, Realities and Responses

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Rural Victims of Crime offers a pioneering sustained assessment of ‘the rural victim’. It does so by examining and analysing the conceptual constructs of a victim and challenging the urban bias of victimisation and victimology in criminological study. Indeed, far too much criminological scholarship is based on the false assumption that rural areas are relatively crime free – and thus free, too, of victims.

Providing international perspectives, chapters in this edited collection focus centrally on notions of place and space, and constructions of rural victims in a variety of contexts, exploring the impact that geographic location has on the type and prevalence of victimisation. The concept of victimisation is often considered in terms of interpersonal relationships between humans, neglecting the potent impact of victimisation of non-humans and the natural and built environment. Rural Victims of Crime discusses existing notions of victimology in relation to non-human subjects, broadening conceptualisations of the victim and associated impacts resulting from victimisation. Structured in three parts, Rural Victims of Crime conceptualises the rural victim, enhances understanding of the realities of rural victimisation and considers both formal and informal responses to rural victimisation. Chapters are accompanied by practical, contemporary case studies to connect theory with praxis.

This book is an essential and valuable resource for academics, students and practitioners alike in the fields of criminology, criminal justice, rural studies, victimology, geography, sociology and spatiality.

Author(s): Rachel Hale, Alistair Harkness
Series: Routledge Studies in Rural Criminology
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 295
City: London

Cover
Endorsements
Half Title
Series
Title
Copyright
Table of Contents
Notes on contributors
List of figures
List of tables
Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgements
1 Rural victims of crime in contemporary context
PART I Representations
2 Measuring and researching rural victimisation
3 Access to justice for rural victims
4 Rurality, crime and fear of crime
PART II Realities
5 Interpersonal violent victimisation beyond the cityscape
Case study: lethality beyond the cityscape
6 Male violence against women in rural places
Case study: rural battered women syndrome
7 Victims with disabilities in rural areas
Case study: barriers to reporting victimisation for rural victims with complex communication needs
8 Victimisation of the vulnerable older rural resident
Case study: applying the crime triangle to Indigenous rural elder abuse
9 Modern slavery in agrarian settings
Case study: farm worker victimisation by an organised criminal gang in the United Kingdom
10 Victims of farm crime
Case study: metal rods in corn – when personal resentment exceeds all limits of normal
11 Victims of hate crime in rural communities
Case study: beard cutting as hate crime in a rural Amish community
12 Rural victims of the climate crisis
Case study: my home is on fire
13 The natural and built rural environments as victims
Case study: Rio Tinto destruction of Juukan Gorge cave system, Western Australia
PART III Responses
14 Legal supports and services for rural victims
Case study: South Dakota’s rural attorney recruitment program
15 Policing rural victims
Case study: policing rural victims in the Pacific Island State of Tuvalu
16 The provision of support and advocacy for rural victims
Case study: victim advocacy in the Delta Region of the United States
17 Community-level responses to rural victimisation
Case study: implementing SafeGrowth in North Battleford and Roma
18 Rural victimology scholarship into the future
Index