4.3 Article

'I may be left with no choice but to end my torment': disability and intersectionalities of hate crime

Journal

DISABILITY & SOCIETY
Volume 38, Issue 1, Pages 127-147

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09687599.2021.1928480

Keywords

Hate crime; mate crime; relationships; racism; homophobic; transphobic; disablism; intersectionality

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This article addresses the issue of intersectionality in disability hate crimes, focusing on cases recorded as racist or homophobic but involving disabled individuals. The study highlights the importance of recognizing the role of disability in such incidents and suggests a shift in understanding hate crimes as a singular interaction to a more complex and harmful hate relationship that can escalate over time. It emphasizes the need for criminal justice agencies to consider the power dynamics between perpetrators and victims when addressing hate crimes.
This article contributes to the growing literature concerning Disability Hate Studies. The study employs the concept of intersectionality and examines experiences of hate crimes recorded as racist or homophobic but where the victims/survivors also have a disability or mental health condition. The data was derived from 33 case-studies. Although very few hate incidents/crimes were conceptualised as disablist, disability played a significant role in the experiences of victims/survivors. The article proposes that criminal justice agencies should move away from understanding hate crime as a singular interaction to conceptualising the possibility that this can become a harmful hate relationship that progresses overtime. Points of interest The study examines cases of hate incidents/crimes that affect disabled people within the North-East of England. The research suggests that hate incidents/crimes are not always motivated by prejudices towards disability, but are often due to racist or homophobic bigotries. The findings demonstrate that the process of defining a particular type of hate as either racist-, homophobic- or transphobic-motivated crime often masks the fact that many of these victims are also disabled people. The study indicates that hate crimes are often not a one-off event, but can be the accumulation of many hate incidents that result in cumulative negative impacts and can escalate into more severe offences over a prolonged period. The article concludes by suggesting that to develop an effective hate crime intervention, social services and criminal justice agencies must consider the possibility of a power relationship, i.e. a hate relationship, between the perpetrator(s) and the victim(s).

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