posted on 2015-07-21, 08:39authored byNeil A. Chakraborti
With hostility and prejudice continuing to pose complex challenges for societies across the world,
developments in hate crime scholarship and policy have facilitated a greater prioritization, improved
understanding and collective action amongst a range of different actors, including law-makers and
enforcers, non-governmental organisations, activists and ‘ordinary’ citizens. Despite this progress
however, our collective responses to hate crime have been undermined by a disconnected approach
to scholarship and policy.
This article focuses on a series of problems which are created and reinforced through such an
approach. This includes the limited reach of hate crime scholarship, and specifically the perception
that academic theorising is often too detached from the everyday realities confronting those who
respond to – or live with – the consequences of hate crime in the ‘real world’. Equally problematic is
policy which is not empirically-driven or linked to academic knowledge, or which is based on
tokenistic, cynical or ‘tick-box’ foundations. The article draws from these faultlines to underline the
symbiotic relationship between hate crime scholarship and policy-formation: one where policyformation
needs academic substance to be fit for purpose; and where scholarship needs to inform
policy to have any lasting ‘real-world’ value to responses to hate crime.
History
Citation
Criminal Justice Policy Review August 10, 2015 0887403415599641
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCE/Department of Criminology
Version
AM (Accepted Manuscript)
Published in
Criminal Justice Policy Review August 10
Publisher
SAGE Publications (UK and US), American Society of Public Administration, Indiana University of Pennsylvania, Indiana University of Pennsylvania, Department of Criminology, Northeastern Academy, Department of Criminal Justice Sciences, Northeastern A