Order Number |
636738393092 |
Type of Project |
ESSAY |
Writer Level |
PHD VERIFIED |
Format |
APA |
Academic Sources |
10 |
Page Count |
3-12 PAGES |
The traumatic experience of being victimized has the potential to leave deep physical, psychological, and emotional wounds. Following her escape from the hands of a serial killer, Lisa McVey faced the challenge of returning to her everyday life. The memories of her seizure, repeated sexual assault, and captivity left Lisa with a need for many psychological, emotional, and social services to help her readjust to her life.
According to research by the National Institutes of Health published in 2011, victims of rape or other forms of violent attack face an increased likelihood of developing symptoms associated with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) in their lifetimes. The research also found that victims of violent crime have an increased risk of developing panic disorder or depression (Kilpatrick & Acierno, 2003).
There are many services that someone such as Lisa McVey may require after victimization. Self-help groups can aid victims in gathering support from others, which can provide a sense of comfort and help eliminate the feeling of being alone. Individual or group therapy sessions can help victims process their traumatic experiences. Psychiatric services make medication available to help victims work through symptoms associated with victimization. Without the availability of access to such services, a victim’s attempt to readjust to normal life can present unnecessary—and often crippling—difficulties.
For this Discussion, select a type of victim. Then conduct a search to identify victim services, for that type of victim, that are available in your area. You may find it useful to utilize this week’s Learning Resources to help your search. Consider whether or not the services you select are adequate to protect and support victims.
With these thoughts in mind, select a type of victim to use for this Discussion.
Post by Day 1 a brief description of the type of victim you selected. Then describe at least two services available in your area to help protect and support that type of victim. Finally, explain whether or not the services you selected are adequate to protect and support victims.
One and a half page with at least two reference….
It is important that you cover all the topics identified in the assignment. Covering the topic does not mean mentioning the topic BUT presenting an explanation from the readings.
To get maximum points you need to follow the requirements listed for this assignments 1) look at the page limits 2) review and follow APA rules 3) create SUBHEADINGS to identify the key sections you are presenting and 4) Free from typographical and sentence construction errors.
Davis, R. C., Lurigio, A. J., & Herman, S. (Eds.). (2013). Victims of crime (4th ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Chapter 12, “Legal Rights for Crime Victims in the Criminal Justice System”
Chapter 17, “Victimization: An International Perspective”
Wallace, H., & Roberson, C. (2011). Introduction and History of Victimology. In Victimology: Legal, psychological, and social perspectives. (3rd ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
Reprinted by permission of Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ.
Office for Victims of Crime. (n.d.). Directory of Crime Victim Services. Retrieved January 31, 2012, from http://ovc.ncjrs.gov/findvictimservices/
Laureate Education, Inc. (Executive Producer). (2012). Rape victims. Baltimore, MD: Author.
BELOW ARE THE TWO RAPE CASE TRANSCRIPT
“Rape Victims” Multimedia Program Transcript
CASE 1977
EMILY: “Things were… different in the ‘70s. We didn’t always have the right name for what husbands did.”
EMILY: “We were young. I was just 28 then. 23 when we got married”
EMILY: “He went to happy hour after work, and when he came home I hadn’t made him his dinner yet and he got angry – which wasn’t new – and he hit me.”
EMILY: “The hitting wasn’t new either. It was what he did after that… that was new. That was rape. [PAUSE] It just wasn’t what the police would let me call it then.”
EMILY: “After my husband finally passed out, I took off. I just ran. I had nowhere to go, because I didn’t know about things like women’s shelters back then. The only thing I could think to do was to run to my sister’s house a few blocks away, so that’s what I did. And that’s when I called 911.”
EMILY: “The police in 1977 didn’t exactly believe that a husband really could ‘rape’ his wife. They listened to my story, but they didn’t bother taking any notes, and they didn’t call an ambulance – even after my sister kept telling them that this wasn’t the first time I had been hit. I wasn’t even given the option to file a police report.”
EMILY: “They just made it all seem like it was all part of the job, you know? ‘For better or for worse, until death do you part.’”
EMILY: “Eventually, my sister drove me to the hospital, and we waited for hours in the emergency room until we were finally allowed to see a doctor. He asked me a few questions, gave me a quick exam, wrote me a prescription for some pain medication and that was that. No mental health professionals came in, no social workers, no one took any pictures of my bruises, nothing. Just some aspirin.”
EMILY: “Did I ever press charges against my own husband? Boy, I’m glad that question doesn’t sound as crazy today as it did when I tried to back in ’77.”
EMILY: “That was the first year the state even had a marital rape law on the books. My sister told me I should press charges, and I knew she was right, but the lawyer I found wasn’t so sure.”
EMILY: “He said the law was ‘too new’ for a jury to really believe that a crime had actually been committed – especially because I hadn’t tried to defend myself when my husband first started attacking me.”
EMILY: “The hospital we went to didn’t administer a rape kit, and back then we didn’t even know that we could ask for one. So by the time we even thought about pressing charges, any evidence there might have been was long gone and all those bruises had healed. That was going to make proving the case incredibly difficult.”
EMILY: “Eighteen months. That’s how long it took my case to go to trial. By then, I’d moved in with my sister and I hadn’t seen my husband for months until I had to go to court and testify against him.”
EMILY: “And as I’m sitting there talking about what he’d done to me, I see him sitting there, staring at me. And some of his friends and his family are sitting there behind him, listening, and shaking their heads – not at him, but at me. Like they couldn’t believe I would accuse him of doing something so disgusting. Like there must be more to the story than just that, and what a terrible person I was to put him through all this.”
EMILY: “His lawyer asked me to describe, in vivid detail, not only everything that had happened between us that night, but also every little detail about our ‘regular sex lives. He was trying to say that because I hadn’t fought back, and because we did have consensual sex at other times, that what had happened that night couldn’t possibly be rape.”
EMILY: “And I’m sitting there trying to remember all those little details that happened 18 months ago, and it’s like I’m just fogging over. There would be times I’d be standing in the grocery store and I’d just freeze, stone still in the cereal aisle, because it would all come back to me in a rush and I’d remember everything. And yet there I am, trying to answer this man’s questions and all I keep doing is forgetting little bits and pieces.”
EMILY: “Eventually, the judge threw the case out due to lack of evidence. So I spent almost two years calling off work so I could go to court, using up my vacation time so I could try to prove that my husband had raped me, and in the end it was all for nothing. Just a lot of money wasted and a lot of unpaid sick days I spent at home in bed alone, wondering what I’d done to deserve this.”
EMILY: “And he never spent a day in jail for any of it. Not for a minute.”
CASE 2007
JOAN: “I just ran straight to the shelter. I’d never even been inside that shelter before. But a girl at work had given me a pamphlet from there – ‘just in case,’ is what she said at the time – and I remember thinking, ‘When would I ever need to go there?’ Because I never had a reason to… until that morning.”
JOAN: “That was the morning my husband finally thought that he had proof that I was cheating on him, and he figured he was gonna punish me for it.”
JOAN: “He’d already hit me a few times before, when he felt like I deserved it, but he had never forced me to have sex before. Not like that. Not that angry.”
JOAN: “My first thought wasn’t to call the police. My first thought was, ‘I need to get to that shelter.’ So as soon as he got up and went to take a shower, I just threw on whatever I could find to wear and I ran all the way to that shelter.”
JOAN: “There was a volunteer working there named Maria. She could tell I was in trouble, so she asked me what happened. I was shaking so bad, I don’t even think I was making any sense.”
JOAN: “But Maria knew what I meant. She said to me, ‘So, your husband raped you?’ And I said, “Well, I don’t know…” And that’s when Maria said, “If anyone, even your husband, forces you to have sex against your will, it’s rape. We need to get you to the hospital, and we need to call the police.”
JOAN: “So Maria helped me get myself together, and then she arranged for me to be taken into emergency care at the hospital. She also asked them to perform a rape kit to gather any physical evidence.”
JOAN: “While I was there, a social worker came to see me and she got a case file started for me. And when that was all over, Maria brought me back to the shelter, where she’d made me up a room with a bed and some fresh clothes, and she said I could stay here as long as I needed, until I felt like I was ready to leave.”
JOAN: “I spent a couple weeks here, all told. But in a way, I guess I never really left. Because when I was here, I talked with Maria and the other counselors and volunteers about all the years of physical and emotional abuse my husband had put me through, and they told me I was not alone. And the longer I stayed here, the more women I met who’d been through the same things I’d been through, or their sisters, or their mothers. Some of them, they were still going through it, even then. Even now. So that’s why I go back there now, to volunteer. Because by the time I was ready to leave, I was even more ready to come back and help the next person like me who came through that door.”
JOAN: “A police officer came to the shelter on that first day to take a statement from me, and he tried to get as much detail as he could about what happened. He told me I was entitled to victim’s compensation for any expenses I had to pay for this case, if I decided to press charges. Even the emergency room bill would be covered by the state.”
JOAN: “The big thing I remember was my lawyer telling me, ‘If they try asking you any questions about your own sexual past, don’t say a word. You just pause, and I’ll motion for an objection.’”
JOAN: “That’s because the rape shield laws we have now forbid anybody from bringing up anything like that. Lawyers used to try to make a woman sound promiscuous, so it would look like she was the one who was responsible for getting raped. And then the jury might start thinking that a woman maybe brought that rape on herself.”
JOAN: “My husband is currently in jail, serving a five year sentence for spousal rape. By the time we went to court, marital rape laws had been on the books for thirty years, so there was a lot of precedent for a case like mine. That didn’t mean it was easy.”
JOAN: “I still had to rebuild my whole life without him – without the abuse, without the physical, emotional, and psychological trauma that he had caused me for so long. But the shelter helped me find a therapist and a support group for victims of domestic abuse. So even though he was gone, I didn’t have to heal all by myself. For the first time in a long time, I didn’t have to feel like I was alone.”
RUBRIC | |||
Excellent Quality
95-100%
|
Introduction
45-41 points The context and relevance of the issue, as well as a clear description of the study aim, are presented. The history of searches is discussed. |
Literature Support
91-84 points The context and relevance of the issue, as well as a clear description of the study aim, are presented. The history of searches is discussed. |
Methodology
58-53 points With titles for each slide as well as bulleted sections to group relevant information as required, the content is well-organized. Excellent use of typeface, color, images, effects, and so on to improve readability and presenting content. The minimum length criterion of 10 slides/pages is reached. |
Average Score
50-85% |
40-38 points
More depth/information is required for the context and importance, otherwise the study detail will be unclear. There is no search history information supplied. |
83-76 points
There is a review of important theoretical literature, however there is limited integration of research into problem-related ideas. The review is just partly focused and arranged. There is research that both supports and opposes. A summary of the material given is provided. The conclusion may or may not include a biblical integration. |
52-49 points
The content is somewhat ordered, but there is no discernible organization. The use of typeface, color, graphics, effects, and so on may sometimes distract from the presenting substance. It is possible that the length criteria will not be reached. |
Poor Quality
0-45% |
37-1 points
The context and/or importance are lacking. There is no search history information supplied. |
75-1 points
There has been an examination of relevant theoretical literature, but still no research concerning problem-related concepts has been synthesized. The review is just somewhat focused and organized. The provided overview of content does not include any supporting or opposing research. The conclusion has no scriptural references. |
48-1 points
There is no logical or apparent organizational structure. There is no discernible logical sequence. The use of typeface, color, graphics, effects, and so on often detracts from the presenting substance. It is possible that the length criteria will not be reached. |
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