My Views on Hate Crimes
Although hate crime is often associated with some sort of violent crime motivated by a desire to hurt a group or person based on that group or person’s identity, Green, McFalls and Smith (2001) admit that hate crime is actually difficult “to define, measure and explain” (p. 479). The reason for the difficulty is that hate, in the obvious sense of a person persecuting another because the other person is different, is not always so explicitly manifested or expressed in the crime. In fact, it could be said that at some level hate is the motive behind all crime—hate for the state, hate for society, hate for the law, hate for one’s neighbor, hate for God, or even hate for one’s self. To make it even more complicated, Chakraborti and Garland (2009) argue that “hate crimes are not crimes in which the offender simply hates the victim, and in reality crimes do not need to be motivated by hatred at all in order to be classified as a hate crime” (p. 4). One can commit a hate crime, in other words, without even having any hatred towards the victim. Thus, even among researchers and scholars, there is a great deal of gray area with respect to hate crime.
For that reason I view the label of “hate crime” as somewhat pedantic and further evidence that we live in a legalistic society that wants to label everyone and everything instead of dealing with people and their actions on a case by case basis. I do not see the label of “hate crime” as a positive step in criminal justice—especially since there is so much confusion among scholars themselves over what constitutes a hate crime.
A recent crime that occurred in Detroit this year is a typical example of what could be called a hate crime: a family was targeted by a neighbor in the community after the family put a “
References
Chakraborti, N., & Garland, J. (2009). Hate crime: Impact, causes and responses. Sage Publications.
Green, D. P., McFalls, L. H., & Smith, J. K. (2001). Hate crime: An emergent research agenda. Annual review of sociology, 27(1), 479-504.
Spruill, L. (2020). Warren family returns home few months after hate crime incident. Retrieved from https://www.clickondetroit.com/news/local/2020/11/27/warren-family-returns-home-few-months-after-hate-crime-incident/
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