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Rehabilitation of hate crime offenders

Research output: Book/Report/ProceedingsCommissioned report

Published

Standard

Rehabilitation of hate crime offenders. / Iganski, Paul; Dixon, Liz; Kielinger, Vicky et al.
Scotland: Equality and Human Rights Commission, 2011. 56 p.

Research output: Book/Report/ProceedingsCommissioned report

Harvard

Iganski, P, Dixon, L, Kielinger, V, Mason, G, Jack, M, Perry, B, Stelman, A, Bargen, J, Lagou, S, Pfeffer, R & Smith, D 2011, Rehabilitation of hate crime offenders. Equality and Human Rights Commission, Scotland. <http://www.equalityhumanrights.com/scotland/research-in-scotland/the-rehabilitation-of-hate-crime-offenders-an-international-study/>

APA

Iganski, P., Dixon, L., Kielinger, V., Mason, G., Jack, M., Perry, B., Stelman, A., Bargen, J., Lagou, S., Pfeffer, R., & Smith, D. (2011). Rehabilitation of hate crime offenders. Equality and Human Rights Commission. http://www.equalityhumanrights.com/scotland/research-in-scotland/the-rehabilitation-of-hate-crime-offenders-an-international-study/

Vancouver

Iganski P, Dixon L, Kielinger V, Mason G, Jack M, Perry B et al. Rehabilitation of hate crime offenders. Scotland: Equality and Human Rights Commission, 2011. 56 p.

Author

Iganski, Paul ; Dixon, Liz ; Kielinger, Vicky et al. / Rehabilitation of hate crime offenders. Scotland : Equality and Human Rights Commission, 2011. 56 p.

Bibtex

@book{0817989139cd4450ae08cd2ee2797a37,
title = "Rehabilitation of hate crime offenders",
abstract = "In October 2010 the Equality Act came into force which, among the new general duties it places on public bodies, requires public authorities to take action to “promote understanding” and “tackle prejudice”. The duty on a public body to reduce prejudice can be seen to include working with those people in the community whose prejudice has an impact both on them and the people around them and therefore applies to the area of criminal justice and {\textquoteleft}hate crime{\textquoteright} offenders. However, despite the growing attention and interest in hate crime, there is a clear need for a shared learning about how to effectively manage offenders. This report aims to provide a contribution to that learning by presenting a research review of some of the initiatives that have been established. The research drew on international knowledge and expertise to look for relevant programmes in North America, Australia and New Zealand, and Europe, as well as in the UK, and, when programmes were identified, sought more information wherever possible by visits and telephone contacts with those responsible for the programmes. On the basis of the research findings, and in the context of the 2010 Equality Act, a number of recommendations are made for the design and delivery of programmes for the rehabilitation of hate crime offenders in the UK.",
keywords = "Hate crime , offenders, rehabilitation",
author = "Paul Iganski and Liz Dixon and Vicky Kielinger and Gail Mason and McDevitt Jack and Barbara Perry and Andy Stelman and Jenny Bargen and Spiridoula Lagou and Rebecca Pfeffer and David Smith",
year = "2011",
language = "English",
publisher = "Equality and Human Rights Commission",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Rehabilitation of hate crime offenders

AU - Iganski, Paul

AU - Dixon, Liz

AU - Kielinger, Vicky

AU - Mason, Gail

AU - Jack, McDevitt

AU - Perry, Barbara

AU - Stelman, Andy

AU - Bargen, Jenny

AU - Lagou, Spiridoula

AU - Pfeffer, Rebecca

AU - Smith, David

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - In October 2010 the Equality Act came into force which, among the new general duties it places on public bodies, requires public authorities to take action to “promote understanding” and “tackle prejudice”. The duty on a public body to reduce prejudice can be seen to include working with those people in the community whose prejudice has an impact both on them and the people around them and therefore applies to the area of criminal justice and ‘hate crime’ offenders. However, despite the growing attention and interest in hate crime, there is a clear need for a shared learning about how to effectively manage offenders. This report aims to provide a contribution to that learning by presenting a research review of some of the initiatives that have been established. The research drew on international knowledge and expertise to look for relevant programmes in North America, Australia and New Zealand, and Europe, as well as in the UK, and, when programmes were identified, sought more information wherever possible by visits and telephone contacts with those responsible for the programmes. On the basis of the research findings, and in the context of the 2010 Equality Act, a number of recommendations are made for the design and delivery of programmes for the rehabilitation of hate crime offenders in the UK.

AB - In October 2010 the Equality Act came into force which, among the new general duties it places on public bodies, requires public authorities to take action to “promote understanding” and “tackle prejudice”. The duty on a public body to reduce prejudice can be seen to include working with those people in the community whose prejudice has an impact both on them and the people around them and therefore applies to the area of criminal justice and ‘hate crime’ offenders. However, despite the growing attention and interest in hate crime, there is a clear need for a shared learning about how to effectively manage offenders. This report aims to provide a contribution to that learning by presenting a research review of some of the initiatives that have been established. The research drew on international knowledge and expertise to look for relevant programmes in North America, Australia and New Zealand, and Europe, as well as in the UK, and, when programmes were identified, sought more information wherever possible by visits and telephone contacts with those responsible for the programmes. On the basis of the research findings, and in the context of the 2010 Equality Act, a number of recommendations are made for the design and delivery of programmes for the rehabilitation of hate crime offenders in the UK.

KW - Hate crime

KW - offenders

KW - rehabilitation

M3 - Commissioned report

BT - Rehabilitation of hate crime offenders

PB - Equality and Human Rights Commission

CY - Scotland

ER -