The National Victim Assistance Academy is a university-based foundation level course of study in victim assistance and victimology that was developed through a grant from the U.S. Department of Justice, Office for Victims of Crime to a coordinated team of co-sponsors. The 1999 Academy is being conducted simultaneously on the campuses of American University in Washington, DC, California State University-Fresno, Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston, SC, Sam Houston State University in Huntsville, TX, and Washburn University in Topeka, KS. The 45-hour academic-based, rigorous course curriculum emphasizes foundations in victimology and victims' rights and services, as well as new developments in the field of victim assistance. This report covers more than 35 different subject areas, developed to serve as the course curriculum. Highlights of the areas covered in this curriculum include: scope of crime/historical review of the victims' rights discipline; specific justice systems and victims' rights; restorative justice/community service; financial assistance for victims of crime; domestic violence; stress management; victimization of elderly; financial crime; research and evaluation; professionalizing the discipline of victim services; innovative technologies and the information age; and special topics, such as victims of gang violence, workplace violence, and international issues in victim assistance.
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