Wildy Logo
(020) 7242 5778
enquiries@wildy.com

Book of the Month

Cover of Derham on the Law of Set Off

Derham on the Law of Set Off

Price: £350.00

Lord Denning: Life, Law and Legacy



  


Welcome to Wildys

Watch


NEW EDITION
The Law of Rights of Light 2nd ed



 Jonathan Karas


Offers for Newly Called Barristers & Students

Special Discounts for Newly Called & Students

Read More ...


Secondhand & Out of Print

Browse Secondhand Online

Read More...


Christmas and New Year Closing

We are now closed for the Christmas and New Year period, reopening on Friday 3rd January 2025. Orders placed during this time will be processed upon our return on 3rd January.

Hide this message

Research Handbook on Hate and Hate Crimes in Society

Edited by: James Hawdon, Matthew Costello

ISBN13: 9781803925721
Published: October 2024
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Limited
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £195.00



Low stock.

This comprehensive Research Handbook places the study of hate and hate crimes into historic and cross-national contexts, examining the reasons behind, and the effects of, the reported increase in hate crimes in recent years. James Hawdon and Matthew Costello bring together a diverse array of experts to highlight the ongoing empirical and conceptual challenges that scholars and practitioners face when studying this topic.

Chapters address a variety of types of hate, including hate based on race, immigration status, religion, and sexual orientation, as well as the definitional and methodological issues involved in the study of hate. With findings from around the world, authors discuss both online and offline hate crimes in different cultural contexts. The Research Handbook assesses the complex relationship between hate crime and state actors, both in historic contexts and in contemporary society. Ultimately, it offers new insights into how to deal with the complexities of hate and understand its variability across both time and space.

The Research Handbook on Hate and Hate Crime in Society is a vital read for students and scholars of criminology, sociology and discrimination. Due to its practical suggestions for intervention strategies and victim support, it will also appeal to practitioners working in the field of hate crime prevention.

Subjects:
Criminology
Contents:
1. Introduction: hate and hate crimes in society 1
James Hawdon and Matthew Costello

PART I MEASURING HATE CRIMES AND THEIR EFFECTS
2. The definitional and methodological challenges of studying hate crimes: evaluating official statistics, victimization, and self-report data 15
Joseph H. Michalski
3. Hate-motivated behavior: measurement, antecedents, and future considerations 36
Andre Kehn, Mariah L. Sorby, Madison Adrian, and Lauren Stornelli
4. The individual impacts of hate crime victimization 59
Brendan Lantz, Marin R. Wenger, and Jack M. Mills

PART II. VARIATION IN TYPES OF HATE CRIMES
5. Acts of bias-related violence against LGBTQ+ persons and the LGBTQ+ community: prevalence, psychosocial consequences, interventions, and recommendations 83
Michael L. Dolezal, Heather Littleton, Stephanie Lim, and Katie Edwards
6. Anti-Muslim hate crimes in the United States and Canada: visibility and the minority-group threat thesis 101
Joseph H. Michalski
7. A reflection on anti-Asian hate in America: from early immigration to COVID-19 125
Matthew Costello and Holly Verity Williams
8. Anti-immigrant sentiment and hate: the past as prologue 142
Salvatore J. Restifo and Amie Bostic
9. Hate at school: how often it occurs and how to prevent it 163
Janice Iwama, Jazmine Talley, and Jack McDevitt
10. Capturing racial threat: measuring anti-Black hate crimes during Obama’s presidential ascent 180
Jonathan A. LLoyd and Ashley V. Reichelmann
11. Hate crime investigations without identified victims 199
Lisa M. Jones, Kimberly J. Mitchell, Heather A. Turner, Gina Zwerling Kahn, and Leanne Gast

PART III HATE CRIMES IN COUNTRIES AROUND THE GLOBE
12. Understanding the issue of hate crimes in Pakistan: concepts and prevalence 217
Nizar Ahmad, Jun Sung Hong, and Paghunda Bibi
13. Cyberhate and young people in the French context 232
Catherine Blaya and Liliia Korol
14. From online hate speech to offline hate crime? Testing individual-level associations with a nationally representative sample of adolescents
aged 15–17 252
Markus Kaakinen, Teemu Vauhkonen, Janne Vepsäläinen, and Pekka Räsänen
15. Dialing down hatred: an online pilot project to test counter-narrative effectiveness among far-right-sympathetic audiences in the UK 265
William Allchorn

PART IV HATE CRIME AND ITS COMPLEX RELATIONSHIP WITH STATE ACTORS: BROADENING THE PERSPECTIVE
16. Fighting ecoterrorism or fighting dissent: are state and corporate actors perpetrators of hate crimes? 290
Robert Todd Perdue
17. Ecosystems of Hate: understanding the relationship between terrorism, hate crime, and hate speech 303
Matteo Vergani and Jade Hutchinson
18. The state’s role in hate: understanding hate crime throughout US history 322
James Hawdon