Fattah
Fattah
Fattah
Ezzat A. Fattah
Criminologie, vol. 33, n° 1, 2000, p. 17-46.
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Victimology: Past,
Present and Future
E zz at A . Fat ta h
Professor Emeritus
School of Criminology
Simon Fraser University • Canada
[email protected]
ments in the applied field. This remarkable phase in the evolution of victimology was
one of consolidation, data gathering, theory formulation, and above all new victim leg-
islation and sustained efforts to improve the victim’s lot and alleviate their plight. In
the theoretical field various models were developed in an attempt to explain the enor-
mous variations in victimization risks, the clustering of victimization in certain areas
and certain groups, and to unravel the intriguing phenomenon of repeat victimization.
On the legislative front there was a flurry of victim bills in a large number of countries.
Following the adoption of the UN Declaration of Basic Principles of Justice for Victims
of Crime and Abuse of Power by the General Assembly of the United Nations, Victims
Bills of Rights were passed by the legislative bodies in several countries. The devel-
opments in the applied field were even more spectacular. Among those developments
was the creation of state compensation to victims of violent crime, the re-emergence
of restitution by offender, and the establishment and proliferation of victim-offender
mediation programs. One sector that saw great expansion was that of victim services.
Victim therapy became a popular and acceptable way of dealing with the traumatic
effects of victimization. Based on this dynamic history and on past and present trends,
the paper makes an attempt to identify some likely future developments in victimology.
It suggests that a transition from utopian idealism to hard realism will occur, accom-
panied by growing emphasis on scientific research, particularly qualitative research. It
foresees that the need for advocacy and partisanship will decline, and predicts the
demise of victim therapy. Future developments in victimology are seen as intimately
linked to the acceptance and implementation of the restorative justice paradigm. The
conclusion is that victimology will likely develop into a truly scientific discipline and
a truly humanistic practice.
Introduction
It is certainly a happy coincidence that the Xth International Symposium
on Victimology is being held in the first year of a new millennium. What
more appropriate moment to make a critical assessment of this fascinating
discipline and see where it stands today and where it is going? There
could be no better time to analyze its evolution, take stock of past
achievements, and prepare for the problems, the hurdles, and the chal-
crimino_33n1.book Page 21 Monday, July 10, 2000 3:21 PM
1. Fattah, Ezzat A. 1997a. Criminology: Past, Present and Future, London: Macmillan, N.Y:
St. Martin’s Press.
crimino_33n1.book Page 22 Monday, July 10, 2000 3:21 PM
Victimology’s Past
A Brief History of Victimology
Early victimological notions were not developed by criminologists or
sociologists, but rather by poets, writers, and novelists. Thomas de
Quincey, Khalil Gibran, Aldous Huxley, the Marquis de Sade, Franz
Werfel, are only a few of those writers who can be described as literary
victimologists. The first systematic treatment of victims of crime
appeared in 1948 in Hans Von Hentig’s book The Criminal and His
Victim. In the fourth part of the book, under the provocative title The
Victim’s Contribution to the Genesis of the Crime, Von Hentig criticized the
static unidimensional study of the offender that had dominated crimi-
nology until then. In its place he suggested a new dynamic and dyadic
approach that pays equal attention to the criminal and the victim. Von
Hentig had treated the topic earlier in a paper published in the Journal
of Criminal Law and Criminology in 1940/41. In it, he noted that:
It is true, there are many criminal deeds with little or no contribution
on the part of the injured individual... On the other hand we can
frequently observe a real mutuality in the connection of perpetrator
and victim, killer and killed, duper and dupe. Although this reciprocal
operation is one of the most curious phenomena of criminal life it has
escaped the attention of socio-pathology.
In his book Von Hentig points out that:
The law considers certain results and the final moves which lead to
them. Here it makes a clear-cut distinction between the one who does
and the one who suffers. Looking into the genesis of the situation, in
a considerable number of cases, we meet a victim who consents tacitly,
co-operates, conspires or provokes. The victim is one of the causative
elements. (p. 436)
Von Hentig insisted that many crime victims contribute to their own
victimization, either by inciting or provoking the criminal or by
crimino_33n1.book Page 23 Monday, July 10, 2000 3:21 PM
about any area is a systematic neglect of the other matters thrown out
of focus and beyond the margins. Precisely because criminology is an
empirically-driven discipline, it has tended to ignore those things that
do not bear the name of crime, criminals and criminal justice.
Although victimology has by now firmly established itself as a major
research area within criminology, its nature, importance and standing
continue to generate a great deal of comment and controversy. Rock
(1994: XI) describes victimology as a “relatively amorphous discipline”.
And at the Fifth International Symposium on Victimology (Zagreb,
August 1985), Cressey openly declared that victimology is neither a
scientific discipline nor an academic field. He called it instead “a
non-academic program under which a hodgepodge of ideas, interests,
ideologies and research methods have been rather arbitrarily grouped”.
Be that as it may, the study of victims and victimization has the
potential of reshaping the entire discipline of criminology. It might very
well be the long awaited paradigm shift that criminology desperately
needs given the dismal failure of its traditional paradigms: search for
causes of crime, deterrence, rehabilitation, treatment, just deserts, etc.
Recent Developments in Victimology
From Micro Victimology to Macro Victimology
In the 1970s, individual studies of the victims of specific crimes,
popular in the early stages of victimology, were overshadowed by large
scale victimization surveys which transformed the micro approach into
a macro approach. The primary purpose of these surveys was to deter-
mine the volume of victimization, to identify the victim population, and
to establish the socio-demographic characteristics of crime victims.
While this macro approach proved to be quite useful to the study of
trends and patterns in victimization, and to the analysis of the social and
spatial distribution of some types of crime, it revealed very little about
the social and personal settings in which these crimes took place. It was
of limited value in understanding the psycho and sociodynamics of
criminal behaviour, the process of victim selection, victim-offender
interactions, the victim’s dynamic role in various crimes, and so forth.
Victimology Today
Victimology today is very different from victimology in the 1950s or
the 1960s. Scientific disciplines undergo constant evolution, though the
pace of change may vary from one discipline to another. Victimology
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has undergone not only a rapid but also a rather fundamental evolution
in the last two decades. The decades of the 1980s and 1990s could
easily be described as a period of consolidation, data gathering and
theorization, with new legislation, victim compensation, redress and
mediation, help, assistance and support to enable victims to recover from
the negative effects of victimization.
Consolidation
In the last few years, the discipline of victimology has firmly become
established on the academic scene. There has been a substantial increase
in the number of universities and colleges offering courses in victi-
mology and related subjects. Numerous books and articles have been
published in different languages, and, in addition to several periodicals
published in local languages, an International Review of Victimology, in
English, was put out by AB Academic Publishers in Britain. A number
of national and regional societies of victimology have been established.
Japan has been a leader in this respect, thanks to the tireless efforts of the
world-renowned victimologist, Professor Koichi Miyazawa, and a
dynamic group of his students and followers. The World Society of
Victimology continues to hold its international symposia once every
three years. The last one, the ninth in the series, was held in Amsterdam
in August 1997 and drew a record number of participants. All in all,
victimology is no longer a subject of bewilderment or idle curiosity, but
is slowly becoming a household word. This is being facilitated by the
extensive coverage crime news and victim issues are receiving in the
mass media, by the wide publicity victims’ programs are getting and by
the proliferation of victim services and victim assistance programs in
many countries.
The last twenty years have seen the creation and extremely rapid
expansion of victim services. Victim assistance programs, totally non-
existent a couple of decades ago, have mushroomed all over the globe
from Australia to Europe, from South America to Asia, and from the
large Islands of Japan to the relatively small Canary Islands.
One of the most important developments in the field of victimology
in the last twenty years has been the formal approval by the General
Assembly of the United Nations on November 11, 1985 of the “UN
Declaration of Basic Principles of Justice for Victims of Crime and Abuse
of Power”. In adopting it, the General Assembly stated that it was “Cogn-
isant that millions of people throughout the world suffer harm as a result
crimino_33n1.book Page 27 Monday, July 10, 2000 3:21 PM
of crime and abuse of power and that the rights of these victims have not
been adequately recognised”.
second. But the second survey included some countries from Eastern
Europe that did not participate in the first one, such as Poland and the
former Czechoslovakia (see Del Frate et al., 1993).
The third sweep of the International Crime Victim Survey was carried
out in 1996-97 in twenty countries in transition. These were the former
socialist countries of Eastern Europe, from Poland to Mongolia in the
East, and from Albania, Bulgaria and Macedonia in the South to the
Baltic countries, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania in the North. The
national reports from this survey were published in 1998 by the United
Nations Interregional Crime and Justice Research Institute (UNICRI)
(Hatalak et al.).
Despite the proliferation of victimization surveys and their unques-
tionable utility, it is not yet clear what they do measure exactly and what
their long-term objectives are. Victimization is an individual, subjective
and culturally relative experience (Fattah, 1993b). The feeling of being
victimized does not always coincide with the legal definition of victim-
ization. So what exactly are victimization surveys trying to measure? Is
their objective to count those criminal victimizations that meet the
criteria set by the criminal code, or is it to measure the subjective victim-
ization experiences of the respondents? These, needless to say, are two
different realities. Are the surveys designed to measure crime or victim-
ization? The titles ‘crime survey’ and ‘victimization survey’ continue to
be used interchangeably (Fattah, 1997a) and the last international
survey was called The International Crime Victim survey.
Theoretical Models
The wealth of data collected mainly through victimization surveys has
led to various theoretical formulations. Models have been developed to
offer plausible explanations for the variations in victimization risks, and
for the clustering of victimization in certain areas and certain groups.
They have also helped to unravel the intriguing phenomenon of repeat
victimization. The different models are presented and summarized in
my book, Understanding Criminal Victimization (Fattah, 1991).
One of the first and most important models explaining the differen-
tial risks of victimization is the lifestyle model developed by Hindelang,
Gottfredson, and Garofalo (1978). This model posits that the likelihood
an individual will suffer a personal victimization depends heavily on
lifestyle. Using lifestyle to explain variations in risk is neither a novel nor
a unique approach. It has been known for a long time that the proba-
crimino_33n1.book Page 30 Monday, July 10, 2000 3:21 PM
New Legislation
program receives, the lower the awards. As the schemes are poorly funded
in the first place, successful applicants usually end up receiving ridicu-
lously low amounts as compensation for their victimization. It is easy to
understand, therefore, why it is that in some countries there is a deliberate
attempt not to publicize these state compensation schemes (Fattah, 1999).
In spite of the lip service that politicians pay to crime victims, several
governments have decided in recent years to transfer the financial
burden of victim compensation to offenders through a levy called a
victim fine surcharge. This surcharge is imposed on those who are
sentenced to a fine, even when the sentence is for so-called victimless
crimes (Fattah, 1999).
Offender Restitution
Restitution by the offender to the victim was one of the earliest forms
of redress given to those who suffered injury or harm through the
actions or negligence of others. This was the composition or wergeld paid
to the victim or the victim’s kin. Since State compensation programs are
often strictly limited to victims of violence, restitution by the offender
has re-emerged as a means of redress in property offences as well as in
violent crimes. The problem is that the vast majority of offenders are
either unemployed or do not have the financial means that would make
it possible for victims to collect restitution. Added to this problem is the
above-mentioned fact that in many countries the collection of the penal
fine takes priority over restitution orders.
Although there are different models of offender restitution it is
doubtful that it will become, at least in the near future, a viable alternative
to state compensation as a means of redress to the victim. After reviewing
the results of the evaluation of a number of local schemes conducted in
different countries, Maguire and Shapland (1997: 221) wrote:
The conclusions seem universal. Financial restitution figures in only a
small proportion of the cases sent for mediation (the majority ending with
an apology or in some contract concerning the offender’s behaviour).
Mediation cases themselves remain very much a minority disposal in
terms of the flow of criminal justice cases overall. The dominant model is
still prosecution, or some form of discontinuance (such as a formal caution
in England and Wales), sometimes accompanied by work with the
offender – but rarely involving the victim.
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Victim-Offender Mediation
ensure restitution by the offender to the victim and to see to it that the
offender fulfil the obligations agreed upon in the mediation agreement.
The programs then changed their names from victim-offender reconcilia-
tion to victim-offender mediation.
Victim Services
The last twenty years have witnessed an unprecedented development in
the field of victim services. Victim services have been called the growth
industry of the decade. The expansion of service programs for victims of
crime in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom and many
other countries has been nothing short of phenomenal (Fattah, 1992b:
260). In 1990, Davis and Henley estimated the number of victim service
programs in the United States to be in excess of 5,000, whereas 20 years
earlier there had been none (p.157).
Most assistance programs, particularly those housed in police depart-
ments, refer victims, according to their needs, to existing services within
the community. Some also provide victims with urgently needed help:
replacing a broken window, a damaged lock, fixing a vandalised car,
driving, cleaning, shopping, helping with children and so forth. There
are also various programs that provide special assistance to certain cate-
gories of victims, for example, victims of rape, child victims of sexual
assault, victims of family violence, etc. Rape crisis centres and shelters
for battered women are currently operating in many places. Overall,
however, the two most important services provided to crime victims by
victims assistance programs are information and moral support.
Despite enormous strides, a great deal remains to be done. Maguire
and Pointing (1988: 37) note that victim support remains essentially a
“grassroots”, low budget enterprise that relies upon the good will and
hard work of volunteers. Shapland, Willmore and Duff (1985: 178)
maintain that the major projects aimed at fulfilling victims’ needs were
set up without regard to, or even investigation into, victims’ expressed
needs. Rock (1990: 408) insists that victims’ interests were never the
motivating or mobilizing force behind the new initiatives to help
victims. Mawby and Gill (1987: 228) detected a right wing, law and
order focus among victim support scheme volunteers. They expressed
concerns that crime victims might become “the victims of political expe-
diency”. While Elias (1983a: 120) affirms that victims’ services really
serve official needs, not victims’ needs.
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As people grow older they become wiser and more pragmatic. A certain
realism sets in, brought about by the harsh realities of their life experi-
ences, by disappointments and setbacks, by a better understanding of
what is possible and what is not, by what can and cannot be achieved.
Gradually, they learn to abandon utopian dreams and opt instead for
more attainable goals. This transformation is likely to take place in victi-
mology, once many of today’s young activists realize that some of their
well-intentioned demands are neither reasonable nor practical, and are
likely to lead, if implemented, to an unfair, unjust, and one-sided justice
system. Criminology has undergone a similar transformation. The
1960s and 1970s were the decades when romanticism and idealism in
criminology reached their peak, spearheaded by the so-called “new
criminologists”. The dreams of that period were shattered with the
advent of an era of conservatism brought about by the election of
simple-minded, primitive-thinking heads of government: Reagan,
Thatcher, and Mulroney, to name but a few. To no one’s surprise, the
idealism of the “new criminologists”, their exaggerated optimism, gave
way to what came to be called “left realism” or “radical realism”. Realist
criminology broke “with the romantic and idealistic conceptions which
have been conveyed by radical criminology” (Matthews and Young,
1986: 1; see Fattah, 1997a: 265).
It seems not only possible but also quite probable that a similar devel-
opment will occur in victimology. In their attempt to focus attention on
the suffering of the victim, and to achieve their political and ideological
goals, leaders of the victim lobby have steadily refused to acknowledge
that victimization is a normal and natural occurrence, a fact of life,
portraying it instead as a pathological and abnormal phenomenon.
They have adamantly rejected any claim, even when supported by irre-
futable empirical evidence, that the roles of victim and victimizer are
interchangeable and that many incidents of violent victimization are the
outcome of dynamic and explosive interactions rather than the delib-
erate and unilateral actions of a flawed perpetrator’s personality.
crimino_33n1.book Page 39 Monday, July 10, 2000 3:21 PM
While activism to affirm victims’ rights and to improve their lot has
been in full swing on many fronts, animated by political and ideological
crimino_33n1.book Page 40 Monday, July 10, 2000 3:21 PM
abuse, family violence, and drunken driving, to mention but a few. The
movement has been influential in changing social attitudes to victims of
rape and domestic violence, among others, and in changing the prac-
tices of the criminal justice system regarding those victims and, in
general, all crime victims.
On the applied side, the achievements of the victims’ movement have
been both emphatic and dramatic. These spectacular achievements, and
the fact that the balance of justice has now tilted in some societies in
favour of crime victims to the detriment of offenders, will reduce the
need in the future for the politics of advocacy and partisanship that were
characteristic of the 1980s and 1990s. Little remains to be done on the
political front, and where Victims Bills of Rights have been passed, very
little remains to be done on the legislative front. Efforts, energies and
funds will gradually and slowly shift to the areas of victim assistance
and victim support. Luckily, these are areas less tainted by advocacy and
partisanship than those of victims’ rights and victim legislation. Some of
the political rhetoric will surely subside. There will be much less need
to renew ideological battles that have already been won. It is to be
expected, therefore, that victimology will cease to be overly political
and will strive to become more scientific. The ideological fights of the
past are bound to give way to sound, objective, non-biased, and non-
partisan research. This research will be aimed at finding better and more
effective ways of helping victims, alleviating their suffering, and
preventing their future victimization.
natural healing powers of the human psyche that are being interfered
with, and hindered by, professional therapies, are bound to reaffirm
themselves. Alternative healing practices, which are currently compe-
ting with traditional medicine for treating physical and psychological
ailments, will prove to be better, more effective, less harmful, and much
less costly than professional therapy. Reinforcing the natural healing
powers of the human psyche, strengthening the family and social
networks of potential and actual victims, will be seen as preferable for
alleviating victim suffering rather than the current “healing enterprise”.
Once this happens, it will be more difficult to exploit the traumatic
effects of victimization and the psychological suffering of the victim in
the furtherance of therapists’ self-interest.
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