Results 131 to 140 of about 7,744 (284)

HATE CRIME – VIOLENCE OF BIGOTRY AND INTOLERANCE (The case of Republic of Macedonia)

open access: yesIustinianus Primus Law Review, 2015
Hate crime can be every criminal act (murder, violence, as well as property damage) when the perpetrator chooses the objective of the penal act on the basis of real or assumed protected characteristics like race, religion, ethnic affiliation, language ...
Elena Mujoska
doaj  

From online hate speech to offline hate crime: the role of inflammatory language in forecasting violence against migrant and LGBT communities

open access: yesHumanities & Social Sciences Communications
Social media messages often provide insights into offline behaviors. Although hate speech proliferates rapidly across social media platforms, it is rarely recognized as a cybercrime, even when it may be linked to offline hate crimes that typically ...
Carlos Arcila Calderón   +9 more
doaj   +1 more source

Hating Hate Crime Legislation

open access: yes, 2014
Canada's reform of multicultural laws in the 1970s and hate crime laws that are said to facilitate notions of diversity actually produce social inequality. The author explains this by comparing definitions of hate crime in the United Kingdom and in investigating the neutrality of prejudicial feelings in the human condition.
openaire   +1 more source

What is (de)politicization and what is wrong with it?

open access: yesAmerican Journal of Political Science, EarlyView.
Abstract This article attempts to clarify the meaning of (de)politicization. Politicization sometimes refers to the inappropriate intrusion of partisan loyalties in nonpolitical social domains (affective politicization). Politicization can also constitute an ideal of civic agency and energy (contestatory politicization).
Dimitrios Halikias
wiley   +1 more source

Immigration and crime in Spain, 1999-2006 [PDF]

open access: yes, 2008
Crime in Spain is not high, by European standards, but together with immigration, crime rates have increased significantly in the last decade. The goals of this paper are (i) to evaluate empirically the extent to which there is either a negative or a ...
Vázquez, Pablo   +3 more
core  

Cultura caballista

open access: yesAmerican Ethnologist, EarlyView.
Abstract The world of Colombian gaited horses, or cultura caballista (horse‐riding culture), is often linked with uribismo, the right‐wing identity associated with former president Álvaro Uribe Vélez. Ethnographic fieldwork in conflict‐torn Antioquia reveals how horse‐human practices of training, breeding, and competition cultivate orientations toward ...
Gwen Burnyeat
wiley   +1 more source

Terrorism and Hate Crime

open access: yes, 2017
This article focuses on political crimes, specifically terrorism and hate crime. Both terrorism and hate crime are criminal activities that are often committed to further a political objective, as opposed to typical or regular crimes that are usually ...
Colleen E. Mills   +2 more
core   +1 more source

Transhumanism Without Transindividuation in the Age Without Epochality: Stiegler, Vice, and Radical Human Enhancement

open access: yesBioethics, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT At its core, transhumanism is utopic and apocalyptic: it tells us we will be saved through an imminent radical change of our being wrought by radical human enhancement (RHE) technologies. We are rushing, its supporters claim, towards a technological utopia so long as assorted techno‐phobes do not stand in the way.
Benjamin N. Parks
wiley   +1 more source

Hate crimes and masculinity : new crimes, new responses and some familiar patterns

open access: yes, 2001
In recent decades, researchers, activists and policymakers have described a wider range of criminal incidents (including assaults, harassment, vilification and attacks on property) as forms of ‘hate crime’.
Tomsen, Stephen A.
core  

Accountability and Hyperaccountability in Child Protection Scandals

open access: yesChild &Family Social Work, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT The number of child abuse–related deaths has decreased significantly in the United Kingdom over the past 50 years, but there remains public and political concern about the actual and perceived risk of child deaths, with resultant processes enacted to supervise child protection practice.
Robin Sen, John Devaney
wiley   +1 more source

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