The word "radical" comes from the Latin radix, meaning "root". "Radical"
basically means "going down to the root" - it's a way of saying that
really big changes need to be made.
So when we talk about "radical victimology" we're talking about a perspective on society which says that things are not all right: we are not
living (as the classical victimologists believed) in a basically
functional society, with crime as a marginal, manageable problem.
Radical victimologists, like feminist victimologists, believe that
society is structured by relationships of unequal power; that those
relationships are systematically unjust; and that this is the context
within which we should think about crime and victimisation.
Let's take those points one at a time.
Society is structured by relationships of unequal power: in
everything you do, every day of your life, you are always interacting
with people who have power over you. Some of the time the tables are
turned and you have power over other people; if you're very lucky, very
ambitious or both, you can reach a point where you have power over a lot
of other people. Most people spend most of their time interacting with
people who have power over them - the boss, the DSS, the police...
Those relationships are systematically unjust: from the day
they're born, some people are much, much more likely to grow up to be
doctors and lawyers than others; some people are much, much more likely
to end up living in poverty and be victims of violence and theft. These
differences aren't random: the Bad Fairy doesn't pick every fourth baby
in a maternity ward, or all the babies whose surnames begin with an R.
Being born into a disadvantaged group is bad luck in terms of future
prosperity. And that bad luck doesn't simply get handed out on day one:
it's dealt out over and over again as you go through life.
This is the context in which we should think about crime: radical
victimologists, like feminist victimologists, argue that this context
of systematic injustice makes a huge difference to how we think about
crime. And not only crime: this framework has a decisive influence on our ideas about criminal justice and how best to respond to crime. Is it a good idea to put security guards on the doors of a
shopping centre and tell them to bar suspicious-looking characters? Is
it a good idea to introduce police patrols on an estate to address
concerns about youths hanging around? If a teenage drug addict has
confessed to a burglary, is it a good idea to lock him up? You'll get
very different answers to those questions, depending on whether you
start from the classical position (society is basically working OK, except for this problem of crime) or a radical position (urban youth are systematically discriminated against in our unjust society).
A brief point about terminology
Sandra Walklate argues that "radical victimology" is something
specific: politically left-wing, class-based, deriving from the "left realist" school of criminology and keen on using crime surveys to measure the prevalence of crime in working-class
areas. She advocates what she calls "critical victimology", which would
be less class-based and have less of a quantitative orientation. Some victimologists have started using this label,
but others haven't. I think it's simpler just to say that radical
victimology doesn't have to be class-based (or quantitative) and use the label more
generally: you can do radical victimology by focusing on ethnicity and
racism, on white-collar crime, on disability or on sexuality. The key
points are the ones I listed above - that power relations are
fundamental to the way society is structured; that those power relations
are unjust; and that those unjust power relations are the context
within which we should think about crime and criminal justice.
No comments:
Post a Comment