Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Issues Related to Being a Victim of Rape. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 7 page report discusses the fact that a
woman who has been the victim of a violent crime and who is then victimized a second
time by the judicial system, social censure, an employment crisis, and even an unspoken
but still understood condemnation based on her personal history, lifestyle, or personal
belief system. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_BWvictim.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
who is then victimized a second time by the judicial system, social censure, an employment crisis, and even an unspoken but still understood condemnation based on her personal history, lifestyle,
or personal belief system. The examples are as varied as the individuals themselves. For example, the woman, Tricia Meili, was known to the public, for more than a decade, only
by the title of "the Central Park jogger" was a well-educated and successful investment banker who was raped and beaten, spent eight months in the hospital, made a remarkable recovery
but was still left with long-term disabilities. She had to relearn how to talk, walk, read, write, tell time, and do simple arithmetic. She will never be the woman she
once was but she has obviously proven herself to be a survivor. And yet, when her book, I Am the Central Park Jogger, was published in April of 2003, there
was a sense that she was somehow "taking advantage of" or "capitalizing" on her ordeal. In her book and in her work as a professional speaker she explains that the
horrific event has given her a deeper and more meaningful life. Nonetheless, "the system" questions her sincerity, just as it often questions whether or not a woman has actually been
the victim of a "real" rape. What the student working on this project will want to consider is the ways in which modern society discounts the experiences of a woman
who is the victim of a crime, questions her choices even when she proves herself to be strong enough to survive what happened to her, and even makes something of
a collective value judgment regarding her choices for her own future. Critics ask: "If shes making money off her story, does she deserve privacy?" Does this suggest that a womans
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