Press Reviews
British Journal of Social Work
This book is a very useful addition to the expanding literature on victims and victimology... Williams provides a detailed analysis of community justice, including a useful definition as well as a discussion of the implications for victims... The world of victims and victomology is only just beginning to be explored and, in a sense, this book can be seen as a guide for the researcher to explore what is essentially uncharted territory.
Community Care
Williams has produced a highly insightful book which introduces the reader to the differing issues of concern in relation to the victims of crime... This book will broaden readers' thinking on the needs of victims- and balances those with the perpetrator's.
Australian Social Work
(Although it is an English book) it addresses the issues from an international perspective. It places community and restorative justice programs in a political context, which is fundamental to understanding their operation and implementation. It is also one of very few books available on this topic, despite the popularity of community and restoration programs. I would strongly recommend the book to anyone who is interested in victim services and community responses to crime.
Magistrate
The book is academic but eminently readable and draws on research from across Western Europe and the English-speaking world to make it a comparative study. It examines community and restorative justice and their implications for victims, considering ways in which the position of victims could be improved without removing the proper rights of defendants.
British Journal of Criminology
Victims of Crime and Community Justice is a timely contribution to an increasingly political debate about the position of victims in the criminal justice system. Williams explores the development of the role of victims of crime with reference to community justice and restorative justice initiatives in the United Kingdom and beyond. His intention is to expose the misplaced assumptions behind policy making 'for' victims, and to question the 'genuine-ness' of the political primacy attributed to victims. By laying bare such assumptions and the ways in which they restrict efficient policy making, whilst exploring the experiences of victims in informal justice settings, Williams sets out to identify the lessons to be learned in order to address the needs of victims of crime more generally.
International Review of Victimology
The book could be read as a whole or each chapter could be dipped into as required. I would recommend it to practitioners who have direct involvement with victims and students of criminology, social work and probation studies.
Book News
Noting that organizations claiming to represent victims have become increasingly visible and vocal, he looks at some of the associated advantages and drawbacks and shows how certain common themes have dominated this area of policy. He proposes a more balanced approach that takes into account both the needs of the victim and the responsibilities of the offender'.