Ethnicity and Crime (3 - Victimisation) Flashcards

1
Q

When does racist victimisation occur?

A
  • when an individual is targetted because of their race, religion or ethnicity
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2
Q

What two sources on racist victimisation do we have?

A
  • the CSEW (Crime Survey for England and Wales) and police recorded statistics
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3
Q

What do the CSEW and police recorded statistics mainly cover?

A
  • racist incidents (words, images, signs)

- racially or religiously aggravated offences (harassment, criminal damage)

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4
Q

How many racist incidents were recorded in England and Wales in 2014/15?

A
  • 54,000 (mostly property damage/ verbal harassment)
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5
Q

Although there were 54,000 racist incidents recorded in 2014/15 - how many did the CSEW estimate?

A
  • 89,000
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6
Q

Why might many racist incidents go unreported?

A
  • might be hostile to police
  • might not think the police can handle it/ believe them
  • might be a regular occurrence so they’re used to it/ don’t think it’s worth it
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7
Q

How many people were prosecuted for racially aggravated offences in 2014? Is it a high conviction rate?

A
  • 8,600 people

- no

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8
Q

Which group did the 2014/15 conclude that had the highest risk of becoming a victim?

A
  • those of mixed race backgrounds
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9
Q

How may differences in victimisation be partly the result of other factors than ethnicity? How could it still be ethnicity?

A
  • violent crime includes factors such as being young, male, unemployed
  • ethnic groups with a higher proportion of young males are more likely to have higher rates of victimisation
  • some factors eg. unemployment may be connected to racial discrimination
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10
Q

While the statistics can record the instances of victimisation, they do not necessarily capture the victims’ experience of the crime. Give an example

A
  • Sampson and Philips: racist victimisation tends to be ongoing overtime with repeated ‘minor’ instances of abuse and harassment with occasional physical violence
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11
Q

Due to racial victimisation tending to be particularly ongoing - what needs to be considered?

A
  • the long-term psychological impact of these crimes needs to be measured, not just the physical injury or damage to property
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12
Q

What might the lasting effects of racial victimisation on society be?

A
  • anger
  • hostility
  • lack of integration
  • taking the law into their own hands
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13
Q

How have members of ethnic minorities often been active in responding to victimisation?

A
  • situational crime prevention

- eg. fireproof doors, self-defence campaigns, defending neighbourhoods

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14
Q

Why might ethnic minorities turn to situational crime prevention rather than the police?

A
  • examples in the past of police ignoring racist aspects of victimisation/ not investigating them properly
    eg. Stephen Lawrence case marred by incompetence, institutional racism, failure of leadership
  • may not be understanding/ not sympathetic
  • police can be openly hostile
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