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Disability Hate Crime

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Disability Hate Crime Synopsis

Bringing together perspectives from academics, practitioners, campaigners, and activists, this book explores the victimology of disability hate crime (DHC).

For the first time, this book brings together recent academic thought, the stance of those working for the United Nations to further the rights of disabled people, and a helpful toolkit on how to advance the status of the disabled victim of hate crime.

Campaigners, support workers, and legal scholars present a tangential approach to revealing the plight of disabled victims and their associates. The book will reveal the expertise required to understand experiences of victimisation and how to help reconstruct the lives of those affected by this type of violence. Never before has a book produced such a nuanced and multidisciplinary approach to discussing disability hate crime.

This volume will be useful not only for those academically interested in how disability hate crime is perpetrated but also for scholars who wish to study how to raise awareness and lobby for change. It is essential reading for those engaged with hate studies, victimology, disability, and vulnerable communities, as well as practitioners and campaigners.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9781032579795
Publication date: 16th September 2024
Author: Leah Burch, David Wilkin
Publisher: Routledge an imprint of Taylor & Francis
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 262 pages
Series: Routledge Studies in Crime and Society
Genres: Disability: social aspects
Sentencing and punishment
Personal and public health / health education
Causes and prevention of crime
Criminal justice law
Legal aspects of criminology
Sociology
Medical sociology
Social law and Medical law