Читать книгу Approaching Victimology as social science for Human rights a Spanish perspective онлайн

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• Aggressive Reporting. Reporters may seek interviews immediately after the crime, at funerals, trials, sentencing, parole hearings and anniversaries. They may phone or e-mail victims, approach them in public, find them through social media or visit them at their home or workplace.

• Where the Victim’s Information Gets Posted. When victims release statements to the media, their information can be published in many places. Victims should expect the information they release to be printed in newspapers/magazines, talked about on television and radio, referred to in blogs, on Facebook, Twitter, and all over the internet. Once made public, it is very difficult to take back or erase the information.

On technology and social media, the Canadian Resource Center for Victims of Crime states:

• Technology has changed the way crime is reported and how quickly reporters must write/file their stories. Newspapers no longer have publication deadlines for the morning paper as they all have websites that distribute information about the incident immediately.

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