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This book offers unparalleled insight into the ways in which hate crime affects individuals and communities across the world. Drawing from the testimonies of more than 2,000 victims of hate crime, the book identifies the physical, emotional and community-level harms associated with hate crimes and key implications for justice in the context of punitive, restorative, rehabilitative and educative interventions. Hate crime constitutes one of the biggest global challenges of our time and blights the lives of millions of people across the world. Within this context the book generates important new…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book offers unparalleled insight into the ways in which hate crime affects individuals and communities across the world. Drawing from the testimonies of more than 2,000 victims of hate crime, the book identifies the physical, emotional and community-level harms associated with hate crimes and key implications for justice in the context of punitive, restorative, rehabilitative and educative interventions. Hate crime constitutes one of the biggest global challenges of our time and blights the lives of millions of people across the world. Within this context the book generates important new knowledge on victims' experiences and expectations, and uses its compelling evidence-base to identify fresh ways of understanding, researching and responding to hate crime. It also documents the sensitivities associated with undertaking complex fieldwork of this nature, and in doing so offers an authentic account of the very necessary - and sometimes unconventional - steps which are fundamentalto the process of engaging with 'hard-to-reach' communities.

Autorenporträt
Neil Chakraborti is Professor in Criminology, Head of School and Director of the Centre for Hate Studies at the University of Leicester, UK.  Stevie-Jade Hardy is Associate Professor in Hate Studies at the University of Leicester, UK. 
Rezensionen
"This book offers new methodological and empirical insights into 'hate', specifically in relation to the digital world and hate perpetrated towards 'hard-to-reach groups'. ... This book re-establishes core literature on hate crime and engages with new avenues for debate that will be of great interest to students and scholars of hate studies." (James Pickles, The British Journal of Criminology, February 23, 2021)