Children, young people and the press in a transitioning society: representations, reactions and criminalisation
In: Palgrave socio-legal studies
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In: Palgrave socio-legal studies
In: Australian journal of human rights: AJHR, Band 25, Heft 3, S. 527-530
ISSN: 1323-238X
In: Punishment & society, Band 12, Heft 4, S. 507-510
ISSN: 1741-3095
In: Analysing Leading Works in Law Ser.
Cover -- Endorsement Page -- Half Title -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Foreword -- List of contributors -- Introduction: Law and Social Justice -- Chapter 1 Lifetimes of Commitment to Law and Social Justice -- Chapter 2 Decolonial Violence and the 'Native Intellectual' -- Chapter 3 A Very British Domination Contract?: Charles W. Mills' Theoretical Framework and Understanding Social Justice in Britain -- Chapter 4 Marx and Anti-Colonialism -- Chapter 5 The Law of Peoples -- Chapter 6 Naming 'Femicide' -- Chapter 7 Feminist Legal Engagements towards a Transformative Justice -- Chapter 8 Social Justice and the Limits of Regulation: The Enduring Insights of Marx's Capital -- Chapter 9 Mariana Valverde: Scale, Jurisdiction, and Social Justice -- Chapter 10 Policing the Union's Black: The Racial Politics of Law and Order in Contemporary Britain -- Chapter 11 Larissa Behrendt - Achieving Social Justice: Indigenous Rights and Australia's Future -- Chapter 12 Beyond Criminology: Taking Harm Seriously -- Chapter 13 The Souls of Black Folk, by W.E.B. Du Bois -- Chapter 14 At War with the Court's 'Sublime Complacency': Bob Woffinden Remembered -- Chapter 15 The Vulnerable Subject: Anchoring Equality in the Human Condition (Martha Fineman) -- Chapter 16 Reflections on Law and Social Justice: Robin West, 'Economic Man and Literary Woman', Mercer Law Review -- Afterword: Intersections of Social Justice and Socio-legal Scholarship -- Index.
In: European journal of communication, Band 38, Heft 1, S. 3-21
ISSN: 1460-3705
Online platforms can help public information campaigns reach target audiences who are unlikely to engage with content distributed via traditional media. This paper adds to this emergent literature, as the first study of the Ending the Harm campaign, which is designed to change public discourse about paramilitary-style attacks in Northern Ireland. Campaign effects were explored through interviews ( N = 7) conducted with key stakeholders, as well as the results of a quantitative survey of residents ( N = 805) in areas most affected by these attacks. Results indicate that exposure to the ETH advertisements correlated with a belief that PSAs were unjustified. Platforms like Snapchat helped the campaign reach younger demographics (16–34 years old). Nevertheless, it was unclear whether self-reported changes in attitude toward PSAs would lead to sustained behavioral changes.
In: Brown, K. J., & Gordon, F. (2022). Improving access to justice for older victims of crime by reimagining conceptions of vulnerability. Ageing & Society, 42(3), 614-631.
SSRN
In: Brown , K J & Gordon , F 2022 , ' Improving access to justice for older victims of crime by reimagining conceptions of vulnerability ' , Ageing & Society , vol. 42 , no. 3 , pp. 614-631 . https://doi.org/10.1017/S0144686X20001051
This article investigates the implications of recent research findings that establish that older victims of crime are less likely to obtain procedural justice than other age groups. It explores original empirical data from the United Kingdom that finds evidence of a systemic failure amongst agencies to identify vulnerability in the older population and to put in place appropriate support mechanisms to allow older victims to participate fully in the justice system. The article discusses how the legally defined gateways to additional support, which are currently relied upon by many common law jurisdictions, disadvantage older victims and require reimagining. It argues that international protocols, especially the current European Union Directive on victims' rights, are valuable guides in this process of re-conceptualisation. To reduce further the inequitable treatment of older victims, the article advocates for jurisdictions to introduce a presumption in favour of special assistance for older people participating in the justice system.
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In: K. J. Brown and F. Gordon, (2019) Improving Access to Justice For Older Victims of Crime: Older People as Victims of Crime and the Response of the Criminal Justice System in Northern Ireland. (Belfast: Commissioner for Older People for Northern Ireland).
SSRN
In: Brown , K J & Gordon , F 2019 , ' Older victims of crime: Vulnerability, resilience and access to procedural justice ' , International Review of Victimology , vol. 25 , no. 2 , pp. 201-221 . https://doi.org/10.1177/0269758018791426
This article provides the first comprehensive examination of the phenomenon of unequal access to procedural justice for older victims of crime. It analyses quantitative and qualitative data exploring the interactions of older people with the criminal justice system of Northern Ireland. It identifies that older victims of crime are less likely to have a successful crime outcome (known as 'detection' or 'clear-up' in other jurisdictions) to their case when compared to other adults. The results provide evidence of a system failing to adequately take into account additional vulnerabilities that disproportionately impact on older victims' ability to engage with the justice process. There is an analysis of the relationships between vulnerability, resilience and access to justice. The current conceptual understanding of vulnerability as applied to older people within the justice system is challenged. The findings are relevant for researchers and policy-makers in the United Kingdom, Ireland and further afield concerned with the treatment of older and vulnerable victims by the justice system.
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1 Introduction: Children, Young People, and Online Harms - Emily Setty, Faith Gordon, and Emma Nottingham -- Part I Understanding Children's and Young People's Experiences of Being Online -- 2 A Real Virtual Self - Rebecca Mace -- 3 Self-Presentation Within Children's Digital Spaces - Claire Pescott -- 4 A "Post-digital" Continuum of Young People's Experiences of Online Harms - Emily Setty -- 5 Dark Patterns of Cuteness: Popular Learning App Design as a Risk to Children's Autonomy - Caroline Stockman and Emma Nottingham -- Part II Responding to Children's and Young People's Experiences of Being Online -- 6 Regulating to Minimise Harm to Children and Young People - Lorna Woods -- 7 Age as a Gatekeeper in the UK Online Safety Agenda - Jen Persson -- 8 A Sociotechnical Anthropology of Online Safeguarding - Andy Phippen and Emma Bond -- 9 Practice Vignette: Headstart Kernow's Digital Resilience Project - Andy Phippen and Louisa Street -- 10 Parental Approaches to Protecting Children from Online Harm: Trust, Protectionism or Dialogue? - Claire Bessant -- 11 The Significance of Digital Siblingship for Children Navigating Online Harms and in Accessing Justice - Faith Gordon -- 12 Pornography Is Not the Answer (It Isn't Even the Right Question …): Reflections from Practice in Tackling Sexual Harassment and Harmful Sexualised Behaviours in Response to Everyone's Invited and the Online Safety Bill - Jonny Hunt.-13 Practice Vignette: Relationships and Sex Education for the "Digital Age" - Emilie Cousins -- 14 Conclusion - Emily Setty, Faith Gordon, and Emma Nottingham.
In: Affilia: journal of women and social work, Band 39, Heft 1, S. 112-127
ISSN: 1552-3020
Young women in Australia experience serious risks from intimate partner violence (IPV) as a form of family violence. However, there has been a lack of attention to the impact of this on young women and, as a result, these risks are not well understood. This article critically examines existing literature, policy and research and in doing so, specifically explores the ways in which young women aged between 10 and 20 years old are represented and positioned in contemporary family violence discourses. Framed by a review of socio-political and cultural history, the paper highlights the early colonial, patriarchal foundations of Australia, which have specific implications for the challenges that contemporary young women experience in situations of IPV. With a particular emphasis on the Australian context, this article employs both an intersectional and critical feminist lens, with a key focus on the dimensions of adolescent development and youth social geographies. Focusing specifically on these dimensions, including development, gender and age, highlights the important role that feminist social work perspectives and practices can contribute to uncovering, understanding and responding to young women's experiences of intimate partner violence through policy and advocacy.