<?xml version='1.0' encoding='utf-8'?>
      <oai_dc:dc xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
xmlns:oai_dc="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc/">
      <dc:title>Homicide, Bereavement, and the Criminal Justice System in Texas, 2000</dc:title>
		
      		<dc:creator>Goodrum, Sarah Dugan</dc:creator>
      	
		
      		<dc:subject>criminal justice system</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>death counseling</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>grief</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>homicide</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>judges</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>loss adjustment</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>murder</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>prosecuting attorneys</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>psychological wellbeing</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>victim services</dc:subject>
      	
		
      		<dc:subject>NACJD.XIV</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>ICPSR.XVII.E</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>NACJD.VI</dc:subject>
      	
      	<dc:description>This study assessed the influence of the criminal justice
system on the bereavement process of individuals who have lost loved
ones to homicide. The primary question motivating this research was:
Can the criminal justice system help to heal the harm of the
bereaved's loss? The three main goals of this study were to examine:
(1) bereaveds' perceptions of and experiences with the criminal
justice system and its professionals, (2) the ways criminal justice
professionals perceive and manage the bereaved, and (3) the nature of
the association between the criminal justice system and bereaveds'
psychological well-being. Data were obtained from in-depth interviews
conducted in June through December 2000 with two different groups of
people. The first group represented individuals who had lost loved
ones to murder between 1994 and 1998 in one county in Texas (Parts
1-33). The second group (Parts 34-55) was comprised county criminal
justice professionals (murder detectives, prosecutors, criminal court
judges, victim's service counselors, and victim's rights advocates).
For Parts 1-33, interviewees were asked a series of open-ended
questions about the criminal justice system, including how they
learned about the death and the current disposition of the murder
case. They also were asked what they would change about the criminal
justice system's treatment of them. The bereaved were further asked
about their sex, age, race, education, marital status, employment
status, income, and number of children. Additional questions were
asked regarding the deceased's age at the time of the murder, race,
relationship to interviewee, and the deceased's relationship to the
murderer, if known. For Parts 34-55, respondents were asked about
their job titles, years in those positions, number of murder cases
handled in the past year, number of murder cases handled over the
course of their career, and whether they thought the criminal justice
system could help to heal the harm of people who had lost loved ones
to murder. All interviews (Parts 1-55) were tape-recorded and later
transcribed by the interviewer, who replaced actual names of
individuals, neighborhoods, cities, counties, or any other
identifiable names with pseudonyms.</dc:description>
		
      	<dc:date>2006-03-30</dc:date>
	    
      		<dc:type>survey data</dc:type>
      	
      	<dc:identifier>3263</dc:identifier>
      	<dc:identifier>10.3886/ICPSR03263.v1</dc:identifier>
    	
      		<dc:source>telephone and personal interviews.</dc:source>
      	
    	
      		<dc:coverage>Texas</dc:coverage>
      	
      		<dc:coverage>United States</dc:coverage>
      	
		
      		<dc:coverage>2000</dc:coverage>
      	
      	<dc:rights> ICPSR metadata records are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 
        3.0 United States License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/us/).</dc:rights>
      </oai_dc:dc>
