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The ethics of victim voice in Domestic Homicide Reviews

Rowlands, James

Authors



Abstract

Domestic Homicide Reviews (DHRs) are publicly available and provide an anonymised account of intimate partner or family homicides in England and Wales, largely by describing the circumstances before a victim's death. They aim to reduce the likelihood of future homicides by identifying, learning and using this to improve prevention and intervention strategies. Epistemologically, DHRs are infused with ethical tensions. In practice, while statutory guidance sets out how to undertake DHRs, there is no shared ethical code of conduct to assist practitioners in conceptualising or navigating ethical debates and dilemmas. Researchers face similar challenges. As published documents, DHRs are open access and have largely been analysed in aggregate as secondary data. However, their accessibility has led to a lack of critical attention to matters of consent, anonymity or privacy or the discursive practices in their production. To date then, ethical issues have been little considered in DHRs. Utilising a researcher and practitioner perspective, this paper considers ethical issues, in particular those that concern victim subjectivity. This can be described in DHRs as 'victim voice' and is often taken for granted. Conceptual and practical implications are discussed, including considerations for both practitioners and researchers that might more fully foreground victim voice.

Citation

Rowlands, J. (2020). The ethics of victim voice in Domestic Homicide Reviews. Sentio (Colchester),

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jun 29, 2020
Online Publication Date Oct 14, 2020
Publication Date Oct 14, 2020
Deposit Date Sep 3, 2024
Journal Sentio (Colchester)
Electronic ISSN 2632-2455
Publisher South-East Network for the Social Sciences Doctoral Training Partnership
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/2783171