Mary Iliadis is a Senior Lecturer in Criminology at Deakin University, Australia, and co-convenor of the Deakin Research into Violence Against Women Hub. Her research adopts a socio-legal framework to examine, critique and impact the rights and treatment of victims of sexual violence in criminal justice systems. More broadly, Mary researches police and prosecutorial discretion in response to gendered violence, including domestic, family and sexual violence, and explores how access to justice is negotiated by victims in criminal trials. In 2019, she was awarded a St Mary’s College Visiting Women’s Fellowship at Durham University, UK and a visiting scholarly position at Nottingham Trent University, UK. She was also nominated as a Semi-Finalist for The Bridge Create Change Award (Seven News Young Achiever Awards (2019)). In 2020, Mary won the Australian and New Zealand Society of Criminology prize for best ECR publication in criminology. This recognises her standing and leadership in intellectual contributions to her field. Her research has featured in government circles, and she has also received outstanding recognition of her submission to Northern Ireland’s Gillen Review into The Law and Procedures in Serious Sexual Offences.
In Adversarial Justice and Victims' Rights: Reconceptualising the Role of Sexual Assault Victims, Dr Mary Iliadis insightfully explores sexual assault victim-focused reforms from England and Wales, Ireland, and South Australia... She effectively contends that successful victims' reforms properly reconceptualize victims not as mere witnesses in criminal proceedings but rather as participants with important interests deserving protection...Perhaps Dr Iliadis' most significant finding is the need for 'triangulating' sexual assault victims' interests with the interests of the State and defendants... Dr Iliadis' book demonstrates not only a sophisticated approach to assessing the effectiveness of victims' reforms (a well-crafted survey of knowledgeable criminal justice participants) but also some encouraging notes for future reformers. An overarching theme emerging from examining three different jurisdictions is that a reconceptualization of sexual assault victims' role within adversarial processes is taking hold, however haltingly and incrementally. That victims might become true participants in adversarial criminal justice processes in the not-too-distant future is not a mere academic dream but something that the arc of history is already bending towards. -International Review of Victimology 1-3, Paul G Cassell, University of Utah, 2022