The Voiceless Victim: A critical analysis of the impact of enhanced victim participation in the criminal justice process

In contrast to many European jurisdictions, the victim of an alleged crime in England, Wales and Northern Ireland is denied any form of meaningful participation at the trial stage of the criminal justice process. This is by reason of the unyielding structure of the Anglo-American adversarial system,...

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Main Author: Sarah Moynihan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of London 2015-12-01
Series:IALS Student Law Review
Online Access:https://journals.sas.ac.uk/index.php/lawreview/article/view/2247
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spelling doaj-804267702c4e42e79a66afc19beaa2572020-11-25T01:57:39ZengUniversity of LondonIALS Student Law Review2053-76462015-12-01253210.14296/islr.v3i1.22472247The Voiceless Victim: A critical analysis of the impact of enhanced victim participation in the criminal justice processSarah MoynihanIn contrast to many European jurisdictions, the victim of an alleged crime in England, Wales and Northern Ireland is denied any form of meaningful participation at the trial stage of the criminal justice process. This is by reason of the unyielding structure of the Anglo-American adversarial system, which facilitates a dispute between two parties only - the prosecution, acting on behalf of the collective public interest and the defence. In recent years, however, the victims’ movement has gained momentum as advocates of victims’ rights have been engaged in an impassioned campaign to enhance the participatory rights of victims in the criminal justice process. Fervent arguments have been articulated pertaining to the value of various forms of victim input. This paper cogitates some of these arguments and critically evaluates how enhanced victim participation in the criminal justice process has the potential to undercut the integrity of the Anglo- American adversarial system; a system with objective adjudication at its core.https://journals.sas.ac.uk/index.php/lawreview/article/view/2247
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sarah Moynihan
spellingShingle Sarah Moynihan
The Voiceless Victim: A critical analysis of the impact of enhanced victim participation in the criminal justice process
IALS Student Law Review
author_facet Sarah Moynihan
author_sort Sarah Moynihan
title The Voiceless Victim: A critical analysis of the impact of enhanced victim participation in the criminal justice process
title_short The Voiceless Victim: A critical analysis of the impact of enhanced victim participation in the criminal justice process
title_full The Voiceless Victim: A critical analysis of the impact of enhanced victim participation in the criminal justice process
title_fullStr The Voiceless Victim: A critical analysis of the impact of enhanced victim participation in the criminal justice process
title_full_unstemmed The Voiceless Victim: A critical analysis of the impact of enhanced victim participation in the criminal justice process
title_sort voiceless victim: a critical analysis of the impact of enhanced victim participation in the criminal justice process
publisher University of London
series IALS Student Law Review
issn 2053-7646
publishDate 2015-12-01
description In contrast to many European jurisdictions, the victim of an alleged crime in England, Wales and Northern Ireland is denied any form of meaningful participation at the trial stage of the criminal justice process. This is by reason of the unyielding structure of the Anglo-American adversarial system, which facilitates a dispute between two parties only - the prosecution, acting on behalf of the collective public interest and the defence. In recent years, however, the victims’ movement has gained momentum as advocates of victims’ rights have been engaged in an impassioned campaign to enhance the participatory rights of victims in the criminal justice process. Fervent arguments have been articulated pertaining to the value of various forms of victim input. This paper cogitates some of these arguments and critically evaluates how enhanced victim participation in the criminal justice process has the potential to undercut the integrity of the Anglo- American adversarial system; a system with objective adjudication at its core.
url https://journals.sas.ac.uk/index.php/lawreview/article/view/2247
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