Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Human Behavior
- Anything an individual does that involves self-initiated action and/or reaction to a
given situation.
- the sum total of man's reaction to his environment or the way human beings act
- is the voluntary or involuntary attitude a person adopts in order to fit society’s idea of
right or wrong. It is partly determined by heredity and environment and modified
through learning. It is also the way human beings act. Many people use the word
behavior to mean conduct.
Human Beings
Human beings are intelligent social animals with the mental capacity to comprehend,
infer and think in rational ways.
1. Extraversion/introversion
Extraverts are sociable and crave excitement
and change, and thus can become bored
easily. They tend to be carefree, optimistic and
impulsive. They are more likely to take risks
and be thrill seekers.
Introverts on the other hand lie at the other end
of this scale, being quiet and reserved.
2. Neuroticism/stability
A person’s level of neuroticism is determined by the reactivity of their sympathetic
nervous system. A stable person’s nervous system will generally be less reactive to
stressful situations, remaining calm and level headed.
Someone high in neuroticism on the other hand will be much more unstable, and prone
to overreacting to stimuli and may be quick to worry, anger or fear. They are overly
emotional and find it difficult to calm down once upset.
3. Psychoticism/normality
Eysenck (1966) later added a third trait / dimension - Psychoticism – e.g., lacking in
empathy, cruel, a loner, aggressive and troublesome. This has been related to high
levels of testosterone. The higher the testosterone, the higher the level of psychoticism,
with low levels related to more normal balanced behavior.
1. Physical
Physical symptoms of mental and emotional disorders include rapid changes in pulse,
temperature, respiration, nausea, vomiting, headaches, dizziness, loss of appetite, marked
changes in weight, excessive fatigue, pain, coughs, lack of motor coordination, and speech
disturbance.
2. Mental
Symptoms of mental and emotional disorders include flights of fancy; aphasia-loss of
understanding or of producing language; amnesia-loss of memory; phobias-strong, irrational
fears, such as the fear of dark, high in some form of behavior – kleptomania, pyromania;
obsession like end of the world; false perception – illusions, hallucinations, delusions and false
beliefs.
3. Emotional
Some symptoms of mental and emotional disorders are apathy – indifference,
accompanied by expressions of worry, crying, refusal to eat or speak; unnatural state of
happiness; behavior symptoms – psychomotor activity, crying, laughing, constant, repetition of
acts, and profane language.
1. Neurodevelopmental Disorders
Neurodevelopmental disorders are those that are typically diagnosed during infancy, childhood,
or adolescence. These psychological disorders include:
Intellectual Disability
Global Developmental Delay
Communication Disorders
Autism Spectrum Disorder
Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)
3. Anxiety Disorders
Anxiety disorders are those that are characterized by excessive and persistent fear, worry,
anxiety and related behavioral disturbances. Fear involves an emotional response to a threat,
whether that threat is real or perceived. Anxiety involves the anticipation that a future threat may
arise. Types of anxiety disorders include:
Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD)
Agoraphobia
Social Anxiety Disorder
Specific Phobias
Panic Disorder
Separation Anxiety Disorder
4. Stress-Related Disorders
Trauma and stressor-related disorders involve exposure to a stressful or traumatic event. These
were previously grouped with anxiety disorders but are now considered a distinct category of
disorders. Disorders included in this category include:
Acute Stress Disorder
Adjustment Disorders
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Reactive Attachment Disorder
5. Dissociative Disorders
Dissociative disorders are psychological disorders that involve a dissociation or interruption in
aspects of consciousness, including identity and memory. Dissociative disorders include:
Dissociative Amnesia
Dissociative Identity Disorder
Depersonalization/Derealization Disorder
7. Eating Disorders
Eating disorders are characterized by obsessive concerns with weight and disruptive eating
patterns that negatively impact physical and mental health. Feeding and eating disorders that
used to be diagnosed during infancy and childhood have been moved to this category in the
DSM-5. Types of eating disorders include:
Anorexia Nervosa
Bulimia Nervosa
Rumination Disorder
Pica
Binge-Eating Disorder
8. Sleep Disorders
Sleep disorders involve an interruption in sleep patterns that lead to distress and affects daytime
functioning. Examples of sleep disorders include:
Narcolepsy
Insomnia Disorder
Hypersomnolence
Breathing-Related Sleep Disorders
Parasomnias
Restless Legs Syndrome
9. Disruptive Disorders
Impulse-control disorders are those that involve an inability to control emotions and behaviors,
resulting in harm to oneself or others. These problems with emotional and behavioral regulation
are characterized by actions that violate the rights of others such as destroying property or
physical aggression and/or those that conflict with societal norms, authority figures, and laws.
Types of impulse-control disorders include:
Kleptomania
Pyromania
Intermittent Explosive Disorder
Conduct Disorder
Oppositional Defiant Disorder
12. Schizophrenia
Schizophrenia is a chronic psychiatric condition that affects a person’s thinking, feeling, and
behavior. It is a complex, long-term condition
1. Heredity
This is the most frequent with family histories revealing mental illness.
2. Incestuous Marriage
Blood incompatibility of parents, maternal infection during the early stages of pregnancy
are some disorders associated with incestuous disorders.
3. Impaired Vitality
Mental worry, grief, physical strain, unhygienic surroundings, infections and birth trauma
may predispose a person to mental disorders.
5. Psychic Factors
Emotional disturbances, such as love, hatred, passion, frustration and disappointment.
6. Physical Factors
a) Non-toxic - Exhaustion resulting from severe physical and mental strain, cerebral
hemorrhage, trauma on the skull affecting the brain.
b) Toxic - This may be produced by excessive formation of deficient elimination of waste
products; by infection, or excessive use of certain drugs.
1. Illusion
A false interpretation of an external stimulus. It may be touch and smell. A normal
person may also suffer from illusions but further investigation by oneself may prove that his
judgment is wrong.
2. Hallucination
An erroneous perception without an external object of stimulus. There are some types of
hallucination, i.e., visual, seeing things although not present; auditory, hearing voices in
absolute science; olfactory, false perception of smell; gustatory, false perception of taste; tactile,
false perception of touch, as feeling that a worm is creeping on the skin; kinesthetic, false
perception of movement; hypnagogic, false falling asleep and being awake; and Lilliputian,
perception of objects as reduced in size.
b. Memory Disorder
1. Dementia
A form of mental disorder resulting from the degeneration or disorder of the brain
characterized by general mental weakness, forgetfulness, loss of coherence, and total inability
or uncontrollable impulse.
2. Amnesia
Loss of memory, there are two kinds, i.e., anterograde amnesia, loss of memory of recent
events; and retrograde amnesia, loss of memory of past events and observed in traumas of the
head.
1. Delusion
A false or erroneous belief in something which is not a fact. A person suffering from
delusion is not always insane. If he can correct his wrong beliefs by subsequent experiences, by
logic or by information from other sources, such delusion is not a proof of insanity.
2. Obsession
Thoughts and impulses which continually occur in the person’s mind despite attempts to
keep them out. It is an idea constantly obtruding on the suffering despite efforts to drive it way.
Obsession is a condition of the mind bordering on sanity and insanity. It is sometimes
associated with some sort of fear and usually occurs in persons suffering from nervous
exhaustion.
1. Mania
A state of excitement accompanied by exaltation or a feeling of well-being which is out of
harmony with the surrounding circumstances of the patient. The mind is hyperactive, with flights
of fancy which may amount to incoherence. Delusions may be present, but are usually fleeting
in character.
2. Melancholia
An intense feeling of depression and misery which is unwarranted by his physical
condition and external environment. He is absorbed by his miserable thoughts. Aural
hallucination is common. Every patient suffering from melancholia is a potential suicide case.
a. Exaltation
Feeling of unwarranted well-being and happiness.
b. Depression
Feeling of miserable thoughts, that a calamitous incident occurred in his life, something
has gone wrong with his body functions and prefers to be quite and in selection.
c. Apathy
Serious disregard for the surrounding and the environment.
d. Phobia
Excessive, irrational, and uncontrollable for a perfectly natural situation or object. There
are some types of phobia, i.e., fear of specific objects, e.g., birds, ornithophobia; blood,
anthophobia; men, androphobia; robbers, harpaophobia; sacred things, hierophobia; sharp
objects, belophobia; sun, heliophobia; and trees, dendrophobia.
a. Impulsion
Sudden and irresistible force compelling a person to the conscious performance of some
action without motive or forethought. The person has no power to control it, however, bad the
consequences may be.
b. Compulsion
Although not included in the manifestation of mental disorders, it is an act wherein a
person is compelled to perform some actions against his free will, and with duress as a result of
external factors. It may be through the use of force, violence or intimidation.
Frustration refers to the situation which blocks the individual’s motivated behavior. Sustained
frustration may be characterized by anxiety, irritability, fatigue or depression.
Conflict
Pertains to a serious disagreement or argument typically a protracted one. It is also defined as a
competitive or opposing action of incompatibles. The mental struggle resulting from
incompatible or opposing needs, drives, wishes, or external or internal demands. In relation to
our study, there are three basic forms of conflict, they are the following:
Coping Mechanism
It is defined as the way people react to frustration. People differ in the way they react to
frustration. This could be attributed to individual differences and the way people prepared in the
developmental task they faced during the early stages of their life.
Frustration Tolerance
It is the ability to withstand frustration without developing inadequate modes of response
such as being emotionally depressed or irritated, becoming neurotic, or becoming aggressive.
Normal Behavior
This refers to a lack of significant deviation from the average. Another possible definition
is that "a normal" is someone who conforms to the predominant behavior in a society.
Social norms – rules that a group uses for appropriate and inappropriate values,
beliefs, attitudes and behaviors.
Abnormal Behavior
Literally means "away from the normal". It implies deviation from some clearly defined
norm. In the case of physical illness, the norm is the structural and functional integrity of the
body.
Abnormal Psychology
The study of psychological disorder
A branch of psychology that deals with psychopathology and abnormal behavior, often in
a clinical context.
Abnormal psychology focuses on the patterns of emotion, thought, and behavior that can
be signs of a mental health condition. Rather than the distinction between normal and
abnormal, psychologists in this field focus on the level of distress that behaviors,
thoughts, or emotions might cause.
Neurosis vs Psychosis
Neurosis is a mild mental disorder NOT arising from organic diseases – instead, it can occur
from stress, depression or anxiety.
Neurosis is a class of functional mental disorders involving distress but neither delusions nor
hallucinations, whereby behavior is not outside socially acceptable norms. The distinguishing
feature of neurosis is a sustained characteristic of showing anxiety, fear, endless troubles that
carries significant aspects of the individual’s life.
1. Anxiety Disorders
Anxiety disorders are blanket terms covering several different forms of abnormal and
pathological fear and anxiety.
People experience excessive levels of the kind of negative emotions that we identify as being
nervous, tense, worried, scared, and anxious. These terms all refer to anxiety.
A. Phobias
This is an intense, unrealistic fear. In this case, anxiety is focused so intensely on some
objects or situations that the individual is acutely uncomfortable around it and will often go to
great pain to avoid it.
TYPES OF PHOBIAS
Acrophobia - high places
Agoraphobia - open spaces and market places
Malgophobia - pain
Astraphobia - storms, thunder, and lightning
Gynophobia – fear of dogs
Claustrophobia - closed places
Hematophobia - blood
Mysophobia - contamination or germs
Monophobia - being alone
Nyctophobia - darkness
Ochlophobia - crowds
Hydrophobia - water
Pathophobia - disease
Pyrophobia - fire
Syphilophobia - syphilis
Zoophobia - animals or some particular animals
B. Obsessive-Compulsive Disorders
1. Obsession – This is an anxiety provoking (annoying) thoughts that will not go away.
Thoughts and impulses which occur in the person’s mind despite attempts to keep them out.
They seem uncontrollable, as if they do not belong to the individual's mind.
2. Compulsion – It is an urge wherein a person is compelled to perform some actions against
his free will and with duress as a result of external factors. This is an irresistible urge to engage
in certain pattern of behavior.
EXAMPLES OF COMPULSION
1. Arithomania – the impulse to count anything.
2. Dipsomania – the impulse to drink liquor.
3. Homicidal mania – the impulse to kill.
4. Kleptomania – the impulse to steal.
5. Megalomania – the impulse for fame or power.
6. Pyromania – the impulse to set fire.
7. Suicidal mania – the impulse to take one’s life.
2. Affective Disorders
The term affect is roughly equivalent to emotion or mood. The affective disorders are mood
disorders in which extreme and inappropriate levels of mood
• Characterized by periods of depression or elation or both.
• A manic-depressive psychosis
Two Types of Affective Disorder
• Depression
• Bipolar
Depression
Symptoms of Depression
• Prolonged sadness
• Irritability or anxiety
• Lethargy and lack of energy
• Lack of interest in normal activities
• Major changes in eating and sleeping habits
• Difficulty concentrating
• Feelings of guilt
• Suicidal thoughts
Bipolar
• Bipolar disorder means having periods of depression, and periods of mania. Mania is
when you feel extremely positive and active. This may sound good, but mania also
makes you feel irritable, aggressive, impulsive, and even delusional.
Symptoms of Bipolar
• Unusual and chronic mood swings
• During depression, symptoms similar to those for major depressive disorder
• During mania, less sleep and feelings of exaggerated self-confidence, irritability,
aggression, self-importance, impulsiveness, recklessness, or in severe cases
delusions or hallucinations
3. SOMATOFORM DISORDERS
"Soma" means body, and somatoform disorders involve a neurotic pattern in which the
individuals complain of bodily symptoms that suggest the presence of a physical problem, but
for which no organic basis can be found. Such individuals are typically preoccupied with their
state of health and with various presumed disorders or diseases of bodily organs.
Psychosomatic Disorder
A disorder in which the physical illness is considered to be highly associated with
emotional factors. The individual may not perceive that his emotional state is contributing to his
physical illness.
b. Psychogenic Fugue State – This resembles amnesia in that there is a loss of memory but the
loss is so complete that the individuals cannot remember his or her identity or previous life.
c. Depersonalization – This refers to experiences in which the individual feels that he or she has
become distorted or "unreal" or that distortions have occurred in one's surroundings. One might
feel that she is a real robot - even though she knows she is a real person - or that her room is
not real or that her parents are not real people.
d. Multiple Personality – This is a dissociative disorder in which the individual shifts abruptly and
repeatedly from one personality to another as if more than one person were inhabiting the same
body. This is commonly known as "split personality disorder."
Types of Schizophrenia
Simple Schizophrenia – is characterized by a gradual decline of interest and ambition.
The person withdraws from social contacts as well as irritable and inattentive.
Paranoid Schizophrenia – is characterized principally by delusions of persecutions
and/or grandeur. Hallucinations, usually auditory, are most of time present.
Hebephrenic Schizophrenia – manifests severe integration of personality and can be
observed through inappropriate giggling and smiling without apparent reasons which to
an untrained observer may only be childish playfulness.
Catatonic Schizophrenia – manifests extreme violence and shown with excessive motor
activity, grimacing, talkativeness and unpredictable emotional outburst.
2. PARANOIA
Paranoia refers to cases showing delusions and impaired contact with reality but without
the severe personality disorganization characteristic of schizophrenia.
- The main symptom is characterized by suspicion
V. PERSONALITY DISORDERS
Personality disorders, formerly referred to as character disorders, are a class of
personality types and behaviors defined as “an enduring pattern of inner experience and
behavior that deviates markedly from the expectations of the culture of the individual who
exhibits it”. This category includes those individuals who begin to develop a maladaptive
behavior pattern early in childhood as a result of family, social, and cultural influences.
2. Schizoid Personality – Individuals with this personality disorder neither deserve nor enjoy
close relationship. They live a solitary life with little interest in developing friendships. They
exhibit emotional coldness, detachment, or a constricted affect.
- characterized by a lack of interest in social relationships, a tendency towards a solitary
lifestyle, secretiveness, and emotional coldness.
3. Schizotypal Personality – Individuals with this type of personality disorder exhibit odd
behaviors based on a belief in magic or superstition and may report unusual perceptual
experiences.
5. Narcissistic Personality – Individuals with this type of personality have a pervasive sense of
self-importance.
A disorder and its derivatives can be caused by excessive praise and criticism in
childhood, particularly that from parental figures.
8. Avoidant Personality – Individuals with this personality are fearful of becoming involved with
people because of excessive fears of criticism or rejection.
10. Compulsive Personality – This is characterized by excessive concern with rules, order
efficiency, and work coupled with insistence that everyone do things their way and an inability to
express warm feelings.
11. Passive-Aggressive Personality – The individual with personality disorder is usually found
to have overindulged in many things during the early years to the extent that the person comes
to anticipate that his needs will always be met and gratified.
Copycat Crime
Copycat crime is crime inspired by another crime that has been publicized in the news
media or fictionally or artistically represented in which the offender incorporates aspects of the
original offense.
SEXUAL DEVIANCY
A sexual act that seeks gratification by means other than heterosexual relationship.
HETEROSEXUALITY – normal sexual relationship between members of the opposite sex which
could lead to reproduction.
It is also defined as the scientific study of the physical, emotional and financial harm
people suffer because of illegal activities. The definition focuses on the effects of crimes
to the victim
Victim
A victim is the person to whom the crime was committed. He is also referred to as the
complainant or the offended party. Also, victims can either be direct or primary victims,
or indirect or secondary victims (Karmen, 2010).
Historically, the Latin term “Victima” was used to describe individuals or animals whose
lives were destined to be sacrificed to please a deity.
1. Direct or Primary Victim - is the person who was actually harmed because of the
commission of the offense. Victims of rape, theft, robbery, physical injuries are some examples
of direct or primary victims.
2. Indirect or Secondary Victims - refers to the family or loved ones of the victim. Such is the
case in crimes of murder or homicide.
What is Victimization?
Victimization can be defined as the outcome of an individual or institution’s intentional
action to exploit, oppress, or harm someone else. It also includes destroying or illegally
acquiring someone else’s property or possessions. These actions can cause
psychological, emotional, physical, sexual, or economic harm to the victim.
Theories of Victimology
1. Victim precipitation Theory
According to victim precipitation theory, some people may initiate the
confrontation that eventually leads to their injury or death.
The victim precipitation theory states that some victims initiate the confrontation that
leads to their victimization, whether actively or passively.
Passive Precipitation
• Passive precipitation means that the victim unconsciously behaves in a way or has
specific characteristics that instigate or encourage an attack.
Active Precipitation
• Active precipitation, on the other hand, occurs when the victim engages in
threatening or provocative actions.
2. Lifestyle Theory
Some criminologists believe people may become crime victims because their lifestyle
increases their exposure to criminal offenders.
The lifestyle theory maintains that criminals target individuals due to their lifestyle
choices. Many victims’ options expose them to criminal offenders and situations where
crime is likely to occur.
3. Deviant Place Theory
The deviant place theory is the theory that the more often a victim visits a dangerous
place, the more likely they will be exposed to crime, which raises their chance of being
victimized.
The theory states that the victim does not play a role in encouraging the crime but is still
prone to being a victim because they live in a socially disorganized high-crime location.
Even though they may not engage in risky behaviors or lead a dangerous lifestyle,
residents of areas with high crime rates have the most significant risk of coming into
contact with offenders.
1. Victim-Offender Relationship
This refers to the relationship of the victim with the offender, and vice versa. It could be that the
victim personally knows the offender, may be actually related to him/her by blood, or they may
be co-workers, neighbours or classmates, or even in a relationship with each other. This
relationship could be a factor as to why he/she victimized by the offender.
2. Victim Facilitation
This happens in situations wherein victims unknowingly, carelessly, negligently and
inadvertently make it easier for the criminal to commit a crime. Because of the carelessness or
negligence on the part of the victim, the offender is given the opportunity to actually commit the
crime, such as in cases of theft and robbery. It is called victim facilitation because in effect, it
was the victim who facilitated the commission of the crime, meaning, it was the victim who made
it possible for the offender to commit the crime against him/her.
4. Victim Resistance
Resistance is defined as action by a potential victim during a confrontation that is designed to
interfere in any way with the completion of the criminal act or escape. Resistance may conduct
like physical retaliation, or calling for help, but it can also include a refusal to meet the demand
of an offender.
5. Victim Vulnerability
Victim vulnerability refers to the tendency of a person to become victimized without any fault on
his part. Such person can easily become a victim because of his personal circumstances, such
as age and state of mental health.
6. Victim Blame
It is very common to hear people blame the victims for the crime committed against him.
Sometimes, even the victim himself blames himself. In some ways, this is good because is
shows that people are aware that crimes can be prevented if we protect ourselves from them
and that there means to protect ourselves from criminals. However, this can also be a negative
thing because when we start blaming the victim, then it is like we are removing the blame from
the offender, this can make offenders feel like it is your fault that they victlmized you.
Multiple factors influence the risk of victimization
Relationship Factors
• Couples with income, educational, or job status disparities
• Dominance and control of the relationship by one partner
Community Factors
• Poverty and associated factors (e.g., overcrowding)
• Low social capital-lack of institutions, relationships, and norms that shape
the quality and quantity of a community's social interactions
• Weak community sanctions against DV/IPV (e.g., police unwilling to
intervene)
Societal Factors
• Patriarchal gender norms (e.g., women should stay at home, not enter
workforce, should be submissive)
Impact of Victimization
Anger or rage
Victims may be angry with God, the offender, family members, friends, the criminal justice
system, or even themselves. Many victims experience strong desires for revenge or getting
even. Hate may even feel by victims.
Fear or Terror
It is common for victims to feel terror or fear following a crime that involved a threat to one’s
safety or life, or to someone else a victim cares about. Fear can cause a person to have panic
attacks if they are ever reminded of the crime. Fear can last for quite some time following the
commission of a crime and under certain circumstances, it can become debilitating. Fear or
terror that becomes overwhelming is unhealthy and victims should consult their family physician
about it as soon as possible.
Frustration
Many victims are frustrated by the feelings of helplessness or powerlessness that surface when
the crime takes place. This can be especially true if victims were unable to fend off an offender,
call for help or run away. After the crime, victims may continue to feel frustration if they cannot
access the support and information that is necessary to their healing.
Confusion
Victims of crime may become confused if they are unsure of what actually happened, as crimes
often occur quickly and are chaotic. Victims might also become confused while searching for
answers to questions like “why did this happen to me?” It may be impossible to find out why
someone else intended to hurt them.
Guilt or self-blame
Blaming oneself is common. Many victims believe they were “in the wrong place at the wrong
time.” If the victim does not have someone to blame, they will often blame themselves. Guilt is
also common when no offender is found. Later on, when reflecting upon the crime, victims might
feel guilty for not doing more to prevent what happened. Lastly, some victims will experience
‘survivor guilt’ – they feel guilty that they survived while someone else was injured or even killed.
If a loved one is murdered, surviving family and friends may even blame the victim. Too often,
society blames victims as well.
Shame and humiliation
Sadly, some victims blame themselves, particularly victims of sexual abuse/assault or domestic
violence. In crimes involving sexual acts, offenders often degrade the victim by making them do
humiliating things. Victims of rape, for example, have long-lasting feelings of “being dirty”, and
those feelings cannot be “washed away.” Some victims even feel self-hatred because they
believe that they can no longer be loved by those who are close to them.
Grief or Sorrow
Intense sadness is often the most powerful long-term reaction to crime. It is common for victims
to become depressed after a crime occurs.
The Physical Impact of Victimization
At the time of the crime, or upon discovering that a crime has occurred, victims are likely to
experience a number of physical reactions. These may include an increase in the adrenalin in
the body, increased heart rate, hyperventilation, shaking, tears, numbness, a feeling of being
frozen or experiencing events in slow motion, dryness of the mouth, enhancement of particular
senses such as smell, and a ``fight or flight'' response. It is also common for people to lose
control over their movements. Some of these physical reactions may occur immediately and
others may occur after the danger has passed. Physical reactions to crime can be so powerful
that they reoccur quite some time after the crime, for example with the victim’s memory of the
events. Physical injuries that result from crime may be classified as: minor (bumps, scratches),
moderate (bruises, broken bones), and severe (stabbing, gun shot wounds). Some physical
injuries will be visible, while others will not. It may not be possible to see all physical injuries
such as internal organ injuries or a brain injury, or those internal injuries caused by a sexual
assault.
• The initial reaction may include shock, fear, anger, helplessness, disbelief and guilt. As
mentioned previously, some of these reactions may reoccur at a later stage as well, for
example when attending a trial or going to hospital for medical treatment.
• A period of disorganization may follow these initial reactions. This phase may manifest
itself in psychological effects such as distressing thoughts about the event, nightmares,
depression, guilt, fear, and a loss of confidence and esteem. Life can seem to slow down
and become meaningless. Previously held beliefs and faiths may no longer provide
comfort. Behavioral responses might include increased alcohol or substance abuse,
fragmentation of social relationships, avoidance of people and situations associated with
the crime, and social withdrawal.
• The third stage is reconstruction and acceptance, which leads to the fourth stage of
normalization/adjustment. Victims often try to come to terms with crime by longing for
everything to be as it was before and to turn the clock back. In this crucial stage of
recovery victims begin to fully accept the reality of what has happened. Victims may try
to reinterpret their experience and possibly find an explanation for what has happened or
to decide that the crime has lead to personal growth.
Victim Patterns
The age, gender, marital status, educational background, level of intellect, income, occupation,
lifestyle or habits, victim-offender relationships and ecology are some of the factors that affect
victimization risk.
Result of various studies reveals that in terms of gender, males are more likely to become a
victim of robbery and physical injuries. In terms of income or economic status, the poor are most
likely to become victims of crimes because they live in areas that are crime-prone.
It was also found out that unmarried or never been married individuals are victimized more often
that married people. This could be because married people tent to more stable routines and less
active social lives.