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Debriefing Victims of Crime--The Role of the Criminologist

NCJ Number
221590
Journal
Acta Criminologica Volume: 20 Issue: 4 Dated: 2007 Pages: 106-114
Author(s)
B. Beukman; H. Conradie
Date Published
2007
Length
9 pages
Annotation
This paper highlights the role of the criminologist by identifying basic guidelines for interacting with crime victims in the immediate and protracted period of time following victimization.
Abstract
Debriefing is a form of first-contact support. The expert understanding of crime, the victim and the social context in which the crime was committed makes it possible for the criminologist to offer debriefing through counseling based on such understanding. Criminologists are therefore in a position to normalize the reaction of the victim and offer preparation for future experiences in the form of crime preventative information. Through the expertise of the criminologist, debriefing acquires a structure that culminates into a technique that is very specific and that does not exclude any other additional assistance from professionals such as psychologists. Much has been said about and written on the need and necessity for and value of support services for victims of crime. The need to support the victims of crime comes from the experience of crime as a crisis period and the period immediately following on a crime as traumatic. This paper highlights the role of the criminologist identifying basic guidelines for interacting with crime victims immediately and an extended period of time following victimization. It is argued that the criminologist can ensure a faster throughput of traumatized crime victims, because they can assist in cases where intervention by social workers or clinical psychologists or psychiatrists is not really necessary. Bibliography