People With Secrets: Contesting, Constructing, and Resisting Women’s Claims About Sexualized Victimization
Date
2016-06-22Publisher
Washington D.C.: Catholic UniversityType
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordTable of Contents
I. HOW CRIMINAL JUSTICE PERSONNEL RECOGNIZE VICTIMS... 436 A. Ideal Victim Theory and Case Outcomes... 437 1. The Power of Ideal Victim Theory... 437 2. The Limitations of Ideal Victim Theory ... 437 B. Applying Ideal Victim Theory to Women Affected by Sexual Offenses... 440 1. Prostitute Women and Ideal Victim Theory ... 440 2. Sexual Assault Victims and Ideal Victim Theory... 445 C. The Arena of Intelligibility as an Alternative Explanation .... 446 II. METHODOLOGY... 455 III. CREATING VICTIMS... 458 A. Responses to Questioning .... 458 B. Demonstrations of Compliance... 467 C. Representing Trauma... 473 D. Why (and How) Intelligibility Matters... 480 IV. CONCLUSION... 484Citation
Corrigan, R., Shdaimah, C. S. (2016). People With Secrets: Contesting, Constructing, and Resisting Women’s Claims About Sexualized Victimization. Catholic University Law Review, 65(3).Keyword
arena of intelligibilityRape victims--United States
Sex crimes--Investigation
Sex discrimination in criminal justice administration