We have a fundamental responsibility to uphold the rule of law and to ensure that victims receive the best possible outcome. We will do this by catching offenders and by ensuring victims of crime receive both justice and the support they need from us and our partners.
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This question was published as part of the set of ARIs in this document:
I will use my institutional and AHRC leave to complete a book project, 'Victims of Crime, Social Exclusion and Criminal Justice'. This book will be a socio-legal analysis of the rights of victims of crime in the UK crimi...
Funded by: AHRC
Lead research organisation: University of Manchester
The project is a socio-legal analysis of the rights of victims of crime in the UK criminal justice system, which directly addresses the question of understanding differences in victim satisfaction across London.
There is evidence that some victims of crime benefit from communication with offenders, at least some of the time, but little is known about how these benefits occur. Many have theorised about the mechanisms by which res...
Funded by: ESRC
Lead research organisation: University of Oxford
The project examines the psychological changes expected and experienced by victims who communicate with offenders, which partially addresses the question of understanding differences in victim satisfaction across London.
This interdisciplinary project examines public access to justice in England over three centuries - from the 1670s to the present. Bringing together leading criminologists and crime historians, it will assemble and analys...
Funded by: ESRC
Lead research organisation: University of Essex
The project focuses on victims' access to justice through English criminal courts over three centuries, which is not directly relevant to understanding differences in victim satisfaction across London.