Obstacles to Inclusive Disability Hate Crime Policy Process: Targeting the Cognitively Impaired Elderly Victim Group

Xinke Luo
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Abstract

In England and Wales, Section 146 of the Criminal Justice Act 2003 made disability hate crimes legal. This advocated for increased sentencing for perpetrators whose crimes were motivated by or demonstrated hate against a person with a handicap or a perceived disability. Currently, this additional sentencing provision is the only legal option for prosecuting disability hate crime perpetrators. This thesis explores the experience and aftermath of hate crimes committed against England’s cognitively challenged senior victim group. The cognitively challenged elderly victim group is far more likely to face bias and violence; they have a greater likelihood of re-victimisation and suffer significant suffering as a result of hate crimes. To date, the voices of cognitively deficient elderly victims and survivors have been mostly absent from scholarly research and hate crime policies. As a result, the purpose of this article is to look into present policy barriers and how the cognitively challenged senior victim group might best receive support, justice, and interventions following discriminatory hate crimes. There has been little examination and discussion of intersectionality in disability studies and hate crime research. Common ideas fail to adequately reflect the multifaceted, overlapping, and complex experiences of danger and victimisation. This paper builds on studies on hate crimes against the cognitively deficient elderly victim group. It noted the challenge of categorising individual encounters as one type of hate crime. Victims and their relatives recognised that they were targeted for a variety of reasons, including their inability to care for themselves and their age. The study contends that the present strand-based approach to hate crime conceals a multitude of cross-identity characteristics that, when combined, might raise the danger of victimisation while decreasing a victim’s chance of reporting their experiences. To address vulnerability, safety, and hate crime against disabled people in England and Wales’ criminal justice, health, social care, and refuge systems, barriers to including the cognitively impaired senior victim group in the policy process are presented, allowing for targeted suggestions and changes on relevant issues.
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包容性残疾仇恨犯罪政策进程的障碍:针对有认知障碍的老年受害者群体
在英格兰和威尔士,2003 年《刑事司法法》第 146 条将仇恨残疾罪定为犯罪。该条款主张加重对出于或表现出对残疾人或被认为有残疾的人的仇恨而犯罪的犯罪者的量刑。目前,这一额外的量刑规定是起诉残疾人仇恨犯罪者的唯一法律选择。本论文探讨了针对英格兰有认知障碍的老年受害者群体实施仇恨犯罪的经历和后果。有认知障碍的老年受害者群体更有可能面临偏见和暴力;他们更有可能再次受害,并因仇恨犯罪而遭受巨大痛苦。迄今为止,在学术研究和仇恨犯罪政策中,大多没有听到有认知障碍的老年受害者和幸存者的声音。因此,本文旨在探讨目前的政策障碍,以及认知障碍老年受害者群体在遭受歧视性仇恨犯罪后如何才能最好地获得支持、正义和干预。在残疾研究和仇恨犯罪研究中,很少有关于交叉性的研究和讨论。常见的观点未能充分反映危险和受害经历的多面性、重叠性和复杂性。本文以针对认知缺陷老年受害者群体的仇恨犯罪研究为基础。它指出了将个人遭遇归类为一种仇恨犯罪所面临的挑战。受害者及其亲属认识到,他们成为目标的原因多种多样,包括他们没有能力照顾自己和他们的年龄。本研究认为,目前基于类别的仇恨犯罪方法掩盖了许多跨身份特征,这些特征结合在一起,可能会增加受害的危险,同时降低受害者报告其经历的机会。为了解决英格兰和威尔士的刑事司法、卫生、社会关怀和避难系统中针对残疾人的脆弱性、安全性和仇恨犯罪问题,本研究提出了将认知障碍老年受害者群体纳入政策进程的障碍,以便就相关问题提出有针对性的建议和改变。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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