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What is Marsy’s Law

Invisible Victims and the Pursuit of Justice: Analyzing Frequently Victimized Yet Rarely Discussed Populations
Proposition 9, the Victim’s Bill of Rights Act of 2008, was passed in November 2008, amending the California constitution to provide victims with rights and due process.
Published in Chapter:
“Visible” and “Invisible” Victims in the Criminal Justice System: Victim-Oriented Paradigms and Models
Armando Saponaro (University of Bari ‘Aldo Moro', Italy)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-7348-8.ch001
Abstract
This chapter outlines the “conflict” and “peace-keeping” victim-oriented justice paradigms. The latter empowers the victims of crime, putting them at the center of an encounter and using interindividual mediation or collective circles to address conflict resolution. Two models are critically discussed in the conflict victim-oriented justice paradigm. The European continental “visible victim” model structures the role of the victim as a full-fledged processual party together with the public prosecutor and offender. In this model, the victim has the same rights and powers of the defendant. The “invisible victim” common law model views the victim as a trial witness, participating, for example, through a victim impact statement (in the United States) or victim personal statement (in the United Kingdom) at the sentencing stage. The visible victim conflict paradigm model enhances a victim's role and involvement in the criminal justice system, offering a solution to existing controversial and critical common law system issues.
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