Photo AI
Last Updated Sep 26, 2025
Revision notes with simplified explanations to understand Victimology quickly and effectively.
454+ students studying
What is victimology? Victimology = study of the impact of crime on victims, victims' interests and pattern of victimisation
Effects of victimisation:
Patterns of Victimisation:
Gender and victimisation:
Age and victimisation:
Social class and victimisation:
Ethnicity and victimisation:
Positivist victimology:
Miers (1989) says that positivist victimology has three parts:
It aims to identify factors that produce patterns in victimisation and factors which make people more prone to be victims
Focuses on interpersonal crimes of violence
It aims to identify victims who have contributed to their own victimisation
A02 (studies and examples): Hentig (1948) focused on victim proneness meaning finding social and psychological characteristics that made them more vulnerable than non-victims e.g. female, elderly and lower intelligence. The implication is that in some way they 'invite' victimisation Victim precipitation is the idea that the victim contributes to them becoming a victim. Wolfgang's study of homicides found that in 26% of cases, the victim triggered the events leading to murder e.g. by using violence first.
A03 - Evaluation:
Wolfgang shows the importance of the victim-offender relationship (in many homicides matter of chance which party becomes the victim)
Ignores wider structural factors influencing victimisation e.g. poverty, patriarchy + unemployment
They are victim blaming - it's almost saying it's the victim's own fault for being a victim. Amir's (1971) claim that 1/5 rapes are victim-precipitated is not very different from saying that the victims asked for it.
Ignore situations where victims are unaware of victimisation e.g. environmental or where harm is done but no law is broken. Examples: 'Police accused of victim blaming as MPs condemn decision to reveal Nicola Bulley's alcohol struggles.
How the Hillsborough families were failed by the justice system.
Radical/critical victimology:
Direct counter to Positivist Criminology. Based on conflict theories such as Marxism and Feminism. It focuses on 2 elements:
Structural factors = patriarchy and poverty, which place powerless groups such as women and the poor at great risk of victimisation. The victims like women and the poor are victims because of wider structural factors like patriarchy and poverty.
The state's power to apply or deny the label of victim = victim is a social construct, the same as 'crime' and 'criminal'. The CJS (criminal justice system) applies labels of victim to some and not others. For example, if police fail to press charges on a man accused of domestic abuse then the woman is no longer a victim even if she is.
A02: Tombs and Whyte (2007)
shows that when employers violate the law and it to death, the victim is called 'accident prone' rather than a victim.
A03 evaluation:
It is valuable in drawing attention to the way the 'victim' status is constructed by power and how this benefits the powerful at the expense of the powerless
Enhance your understanding with flashcards, quizzes, and exams—designed to help you grasp key concepts, reinforce learning, and master any topic with confidence!
80 flashcards
Flashcards on Victimology
Revise key concepts with interactive flashcards.
Try Sociology Flashcards8 quizzes
Quizzes on Victimology
Test your knowledge with fun and engaging quizzes.
Try Sociology Quizzes29 questions
Exam questions on Victimology
Boost your confidence with real exam questions.
Try Sociology Questions27 exams created
Exam Builder on Victimology
Create custom exams across topics for better practice!
Try Sociology exam builder14 papers
Past Papers on Victimology
Practice past papers to reinforce exam experience.
Try Sociology Past PapersDiscover More Revision Notes Related to Victimology to Deepen Your Understanding and Improve Your Mastery
96%
114 rated
Crime and Deviance
Social Distribution of Crime (patterns and trends)
282+ studying
195KViewsJoin 500,000+ A-Level students using SimpleStudy...
Join Thousands of A-Level Students Using SimpleStudy to Learn Smarter, Stay Organized, and Boost Their Grades with Confidence!
Report Improved Results
Recommend to friends
Students Supported
Questions answered