Hate crime law & social contention : a comparison of nongovernmental knowledge practices in Canada & the United States

Hate crime laws in both Canada and the United States purport to promote equality using the language of antidiscrimination law. National criminal codes in both countries authorize enhanced punishment for crimes motivated by “sexual orientation” but not “gender identity” or “gender expression.” Citi...

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Main Author: Haggerty, Bernard P.
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/1520
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-15202014-03-26T03:35:20Z Hate crime law & social contention : a comparison of nongovernmental knowledge practices in Canada & the United States Haggerty, Bernard P. Social contention Hate crime law Equality United States Canada Washington British Columbia Homophobia Trans-phobia Hate crime laws in both Canada and the United States purport to promote equality using the language of antidiscrimination law. National criminal codes in both countries authorize enhanced punishment for crimes motivated by “sexual orientation” but not “gender identity” or “gender expression.” Cities and states in the United States have also adopted hate crime laws, some of which denounce both homophobic and trans-phobic crimes. Hate crime penalty enhancement laws have been applied by courts in both Canada and the United States to establish a growing jurisprudence. In both countries, moreover, other hate crime laws contribute to official legal knowledge by regulating hate speech, hate crime statistics, and conduct equivalent to hate crimes in schools, workplaces, and elsewhere. Yet, despite the proliferation of hate crime laws and jurisprudence, governmental officials do not control all legal knowledge about hate crimes. Sociological “others” attend criminal sentencing proceedings and provide support to hate crime victims during prosecutions, but they also frame their own unofficial inquiries and announce their own classification decisions for hate-related events. In both Canada and the United States, nongovernmental groups contend both inside and outside official governmental channels to establish legal knowledge about homophobic and trans-phobic hate crimes. In two comparable Canadian and American cities, similar groups monitor and classify homophobic and trans-phobic attacks using a variety of information practices. Interviews with representatives of these groups reveal a relationship between the practices of each group and hate crime laws at each site. The results support one principal conclusion. The availability of local legislative power and a local mechanism for public review are key determinants of the sites and styles of nongovernmental contention about hate crimes. Where police gather and publish official hate crime statistics, the official classification system serves as both a site for mobilization, and a constraint on the styles of contention used by nongovernmental groups. Where police do not gather or publish hate crime statistics, nongovernmental groups are deprived of the resource represented by a local site for social contention, but their styles of contention are liberated from the subtle influences of an official hate crime classification system. 2008-08-27T16:50:56Z 2008-08-27T16:50:56Z 2008 2008-08-27T16:50:56Z 2008-11 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/1520 eng University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Social contention
Hate crime law
Equality
United States
Canada
Washington
British Columbia
Homophobia
Trans-phobia
spellingShingle Social contention
Hate crime law
Equality
United States
Canada
Washington
British Columbia
Homophobia
Trans-phobia
Haggerty, Bernard P.
Hate crime law & social contention : a comparison of nongovernmental knowledge practices in Canada & the United States
description Hate crime laws in both Canada and the United States purport to promote equality using the language of antidiscrimination law. National criminal codes in both countries authorize enhanced punishment for crimes motivated by “sexual orientation” but not “gender identity” or “gender expression.” Cities and states in the United States have also adopted hate crime laws, some of which denounce both homophobic and trans-phobic crimes. Hate crime penalty enhancement laws have been applied by courts in both Canada and the United States to establish a growing jurisprudence. In both countries, moreover, other hate crime laws contribute to official legal knowledge by regulating hate speech, hate crime statistics, and conduct equivalent to hate crimes in schools, workplaces, and elsewhere. Yet, despite the proliferation of hate crime laws and jurisprudence, governmental officials do not control all legal knowledge about hate crimes. Sociological “others” attend criminal sentencing proceedings and provide support to hate crime victims during prosecutions, but they also frame their own unofficial inquiries and announce their own classification decisions for hate-related events. In both Canada and the United States, nongovernmental groups contend both inside and outside official governmental channels to establish legal knowledge about homophobic and trans-phobic hate crimes. In two comparable Canadian and American cities, similar groups monitor and classify homophobic and trans-phobic attacks using a variety of information practices. Interviews with representatives of these groups reveal a relationship between the practices of each group and hate crime laws at each site. The results support one principal conclusion. The availability of local legislative power and a local mechanism for public review are key determinants of the sites and styles of nongovernmental contention about hate crimes. Where police gather and publish official hate crime statistics, the official classification system serves as both a site for mobilization, and a constraint on the styles of contention used by nongovernmental groups. Where police do not gather or publish hate crime statistics, nongovernmental groups are deprived of the resource represented by a local site for social contention, but their styles of contention are liberated from the subtle influences of an official hate crime classification system.
author Haggerty, Bernard P.
author_facet Haggerty, Bernard P.
author_sort Haggerty, Bernard P.
title Hate crime law & social contention : a comparison of nongovernmental knowledge practices in Canada & the United States
title_short Hate crime law & social contention : a comparison of nongovernmental knowledge practices in Canada & the United States
title_full Hate crime law & social contention : a comparison of nongovernmental knowledge practices in Canada & the United States
title_fullStr Hate crime law & social contention : a comparison of nongovernmental knowledge practices in Canada & the United States
title_full_unstemmed Hate crime law & social contention : a comparison of nongovernmental knowledge practices in Canada & the United States
title_sort hate crime law & social contention : a comparison of nongovernmental knowledge practices in canada & the united states
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/1520
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