APPROACHES TO VICTIMOLOGY 2
Approaches to Victimology
Victimology studies the relationship between an offender and an injured party by
examining the nature of suffering. Victimology focuses on whether the perpetrators were
strangers, friends, acquaintances or even family members and why a particular area was the
target. Criminal victimization may lead to physical injuries, economic costs and psychological
harm (Fattah, 2016). Victimology entails other fields such as political science, psychology,
economics, and social work. Victimology studies the kind of help needed by the injured parties.
Victimology focuses on the measuring and identification of the frequency of various victimology
types such as date rape, stalking and carjacking (Barak et al., 2010). Victimologists collect data
and analyze the detailed information offered by government agencies that collect crime statistics.
This writing seeks to discuss victimology.
The victimology study in the United States is considered to be narrower in scope
concerning the broader nature of victimization on which several scholars in the community
major on. There are personal severe victimization forms on which policymakers and researchers
focus. Victimology entails the study of victimization and victims (Fattah, 2016). The narrow
approach to victimology focuses on the wrongdoing, and criminal law guides it. It is an action
that is seen to violate the rule against authority. A broad approach to victimology insists that
deviant behavior and crime are the same. It focuses on the action that is not accepted by society.
The book focuses on the broader approach to victimology. The book focuses on deviant
behavior. The book highlights abuse of police to black youths. The officers' advice the teens to
kill each other to avoid being locked up (Barak et al., 2010). Rogue officers carry out these vices
in small teams. The book highlights that most prisons do not carry out a mental assessment
before admitting prisoners. Lack of evaluation is socially unacceptable since it leads to suicide