Understanding how 'hate' hurts:a case study of working with offenders and potential offenders

Iganski, Paul and Ainsworth, Karen and Geraghty, Laura and Lagou, Spyridoula and Patel, Nafysa (2014) Understanding how 'hate' hurts:a case study of working with offenders and potential offenders. In: Responding to hate crime. Policy Press, Bristol, pp. 231-242.

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Abstract

Few so-called ‘hate crime’ offenders truly hate their victims. Arguably, too, many such offenders do not foresee the depth of hurt their crimes can inflict. Recognising that many acts of ‘hate crime’ are rather more complex than offenders simply venting ‘hate’ to inflict deep hurts opens-up the potential for working with offenders to enable them to appreciate the impacts and consequences of their actions and possibly prevent future offending. This essay offers two case studies from evaluations of projects in the north west of England to illustrate how understanding about the hurts of ‘hate crime’ can be used in working with offenders and potential offenders on the principle that if empathy for the victim can be engendered then those who do not truly ‘hate’ might think twice before acting in the future, or acting again in the way they had done so before.

Item Type:
Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings
Subjects:
?? HATE CRIMEOFFENDERSHURTSPREVENTIONVICTIM-EMPATHY ??
ID Code:
66694
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
23 Sep 2013 09:54
Refereed?:
No
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
15 Sep 2023 04:53