Professor
Betty Stanko on the topic of "Crime Prevention:
The Good, the Bad and the Vulnerable" |
Wednesday
20 August 1997
Professor Stanko teaches in the Department of Law, Brunel
University, United Kingdom, and is the Research Director
of the ESRC Violence Programme. She is highly regarded
internationally for her research and scholarship and
is the 1996 recipient of the prestigious August Vollmer
award of the American Society of Criminology. She visited
the University of Sydney Law School from 22 July to
23 August under the University’s Distinguished
Visiting Scholars Program.
Professor Stanko’s research interests include
violence, particularly homophobic violence and violence
against women, gender and crime, crime prevention, policing
violence, victimisation and the narrative of protection.
She has written and edited several books, including
Judge, Lawyer, Victim, Thief; Women, Police and Male
Violence; Just Boys Doing Business: Men, Masculinities
and Crime; Intimate Intrusions: Women’s Experience
of Male Violence; and Perspectives on Violence.
Professor Stanko spoke on the ideological strength of
‘the victim’ as a cultural icon for modern
vulnerability, and the impact of the rhetoric of ‘the
victim’, in particular the notion of a ‘good’
and a ‘bad’ victim, on attitudes to crime
prevention and the managing of resources in the criminal
justice system. Conference papers are not available |