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Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology

Hate Crime

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A Trauma-Centered Approach To Addressing Hate Crimes, Avlana Eisenberg Jan 2022

A Trauma-Centered Approach To Addressing Hate Crimes, Avlana Eisenberg

Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology

A dominant justification for hate crime laws is that they serve a crucial expressive function—sending messages of valuation to victims, and of denunciation to defendants. Yet, as this Essay will demonstrate, the focus on criminalizing hate—through the enactment of either sentencing enhancements or stand-alone hate crime statutes—has resulted in a thin conception of messaging that fails to recognize the limitations of the criminal law in addressing psychic harm.

This Essay argues that a more robust approach to addressing hate crimes must consider alternatives—beyond incarceration—that would center the trauma associated with hate crimes. This includes restorative justice models that might benefit …


The Conundrums Of Hate Crime Prevention, Shirin Sinnar Jan 2022

The Conundrums Of Hate Crime Prevention, Shirin Sinnar

Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology

The recent surge in hate crimes alongside persistent concerns over policing and prisons has catalyzed new interest in hate crime prevention outside the criminal legal system. While policymakers, civil rights groups, and people in targeted communities internally disagree on the value of hate crime laws and law enforcement responses to hate crimes, they often converge in advocating measures that could prevent hate crimes from occurring in the first place. Those measures potentially include educational initiatives, conflict resolution programs, political reforms, social services, or other proactive efforts aimed at the root causes of hate crimes.

Focusing on the public conversation around …


U.S. Hate Crime Trends: What Disaggregation Of Three Decades Of Data Reveals About A Changing Threat And An Invisible Record, Brian Levin, James Nolan, Kiana Perst Jan 2022

U.S. Hate Crime Trends: What Disaggregation Of Three Decades Of Data Reveals About A Changing Threat And An Invisible Record, Brian Levin, James Nolan, Kiana Perst

Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology

When prejudice-related data are combined and analyzed over time, critical information is uncovered about overall trends, related intermittent spikes, and less common sharp inflectional shifts in aggression. These shifts impact social cohesion and grievously harm specific sub-groups when aggression escalates and is redirected or mainstreamed. These data, so critical to public policy formation, show that we are in such a historic inflection period now. Moreover, analysis of the latest, though partial Federal Bureau of Investigation hate crime data release, when overlaid with available data from excluded large jurisdictions, reveals hate crimes hit a record high in 2021 in the United …


Reframing Hate, Lu-In Wang Jan 2022

Reframing Hate, Lu-In Wang

Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology

The concept and naming of “hate crime,” and the adoption of special laws to address it, provoked controversy and raised fundamental questions when they were introduced in the 1980s. In the decades since, neither hate crime itself nor those hotly debated questions have abated. To the contrary, hate crime has increased in recent years—although the prominent target groups have shifted over time—and the debate over hate crime laws has reignited as well. The still-open questions range from the philosophical to the doctrinal to the pragmatic: What justifies the enhanced punishment that hate crime laws impose based on the perpetrator’s motivation? …


Pick The Lowest Hanging Fruit: Hate Crime Law And The Acknowledgment Of Racial Violence, Jeannine Bell Jan 2022

Pick The Lowest Hanging Fruit: Hate Crime Law And The Acknowledgment Of Racial Violence, Jeannine Bell

Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology

The U.S. has had remedies aimed at racial violence since the Ku Klux Klan Act was passed in the 1870s. Hate crime law, which is more than thirty years old, is the most recent incarnation. The passage of hate crime law, first at the federal level and later by the states, has done very little to slow the rising tide of bigotry. After a brief discussion of state and federal hate crime law, this Article will critically examine the country’s approach to hate crime. The article will then discuss one of the most prevalent forms of hate crime—bias-motivated violence that …