Kirchengast provides researchers with the status report on rights for victims of crime in the inquisitorial, adversarial and hybrid legal systems. It is an essential resource to getting victims the long overdue equitable access to justice across the world. Irvin Waller, author of Rights for Victims of Crime: Rebalancing Justice The nature and status of victim rights remains ill understood internationally. Tyrone Kirchengast brings full analytical rigour to shed a comparative and international light on this most topical issue. "Victimology and Victim Rights" is indispensable reading for anyone interested in the topic. Professor Frédéric Mégret, William Dawson Scholar, Faculty of Law, McGill University, Canada Research Chair on the Law of Human Rights and Legal Pluralism, 2006-2015.This important new book traces how crime victims’ rights have been expanding on often parallel (and sometimes different) tracks in various countries around the globe. It is a "must read" for anyone trying to understand emerging norms in victimology and victims’ rights. It also offers a systematic view of victims’ rights in both supra-national bodies such as the European Court of Justice as well as in domestic law in many countries around the world. The book fills an important gap by stepping back and taking a comparative view of what is one of the most important subjects in criminal law today. Paul G. Cassell, Ronald N. Boyce Presidential Professor of Criminal Law, University Distinguished Professor of Law, S.J. Quinney College of Law at the University of UtahAn important addition to the literature in victimology and legal studies, the book provides a comprehensive discussion of the interface between social science research on victims in justice proceedings and victim rights from a comparative perspective. Integrating findings from multi-jurisdictional approaches to the study of victims, victimization, and victim rights, it fills a void in the burgeoning victimological literature. Professor Kirchengast has meticulously assembled and analyzed case studies from different jurisdictions, legal systems, regional and international fori addressing victim rights, resulting in an impressive work that will serve well victimologists, legal scholars, and policy makers in efforts to advance crime victims' concerns and rights.Edna Erez, University of Illinois at Chicago