Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byRachel Parrish Modified over 8 years ago
1
What is disability hate crime? TND Joanna Perry, Hate Crime Officer osce.org/odihr
2
OSCE: a hate crime is a criminal offence committed with a bias motivation Criminal offence against person or property: Robbery rape, assault, murder, property damage Bias motivation, targeting a fundamental characteristic: Ethnicity, sexual orientation, religion, disability 201 What is disability hate crime
3
How to recognize disability hate crimes previous incidents, escalate in severity and frequency, sustained attacks, excessive violence targeting aids: e.g. wheelchairs, other mobility aids, adapted cars perpetrators are often "friends", carers, acquaintances, neighbours etc. multiple perpetrators are involved in incidents condoning and encouraging the main offender(s) - often filming on their mobile phones and sending pictures to friends/social networking sites, YouTube etc. false accusations of the victim being a paedophile or "grass“ cruelty, humiliation, degrading treatment, often related to the nature of the disability for example blindfolding someone who is profoundly deaf or destroying mobility aids. 301 The OSCE and our work on hate crime
4
TND Joanna Perry, Hate Crime Officer osce.org/odihr
5
TND Joanna Perry, Hate Crime Officer osce.org/odihr Legal and conceptual approaches to disability hate crime in the OSCE region Overview : -Hate crime laws -Hate crime recording and reporting -Understanding the impact of hate crime
6
TND Joanna Perry, Hate Crime Officer osce.org/odihr Hate crime laws 17 countries, including Croatia, have hate crime laws that include disability as a protected characteristic Inclusion of ‘mental’ and/or ‘physical’ Some include ‘social status’, ‘health’ Hostility vs. Discrimination model
7
Examples of legal provisions Croatia Art. 87(20) A hate crime is a crime committed because of race, color, religion, national or ethnic origin, disability, gender, sexual orientation or gender identity of another person. Such actions will be taken as an aggravating circumstance if this law does not explicitly prescribe heavier punishment. 701 The OSCE and our work on hate crime
8
Examples of legal provisions cont‘d Finland: Criminal Code, Chapter 6, section 5 – Grounds increasing the punishment (13.5.2011/511) The following are grounds for increasing the punishment: (…)4) the crime has been motivated by race, colour, national or ethnic origin, religion or beliefs, sexual orientation or disability or by other comparable ground (…) UK: at the time of committing the offence, or immediately before or after doing so, the offender demonstrated towards the victim of the offence hostility based on a disability (or presumed disability) of the victim, or that the offence is motivated (wholly or partly) by hostility towards persons who have a disability or a particular disability 801 The OSCE and our work on hate crime
9
TND Joanna Perry, Hate Crime Officer osce.org/odihr Hate crime reporting and recording
10
TND Joanna Perry, Hate Crime Officer osce.org/odihr Hate crime reporting and recording
11
Understanding the impact of disability hate crime Disability hate crime as an issue of independent living Understanding the impact of disability hate crime: NGOs Victimisation surveys Focus groups 1101 The OSCE and our work on hate crime
12
Any questions? Joanna.perry@odihr.pl 1201 The OSCE and our work on hate crime
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.