Concerns about victimisation have multiplied over the last fifty years. Victims, Culture
and Society explores the major concepts, debates and controversies that these concerns
have generated across a range of disciplines, but particularly within criminology and
victimology. As the impacts of globalisation, the movement of peoples and the divergences
between the global North and global South have become ever more apparent,
this series provides an authoritative space for original contributions in making sense of
these far-reaching changes on individuals, localities and nationalities. These issues by
their very nature demand an interdisciplinary approach and an interdisciplinary voice
outside conventional conceptual boundaries. Victims, Culture and Society offers the space
for that voice.