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January 18, 2023

Hate crime legislation vague and inconsistent among 50 U.S. states

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

Hate crimes in the United States have increased in frequency in recent years. The rise of antisemitism, white supremacy and religious extremism has prompted the federal government and many states to pass several pieces of legislation targeted at crimes motivated by hate.

To better understand the nature of these laws, researchers from Florida Atlantic University conducted a that focused on the nation's hate crime from all 50 states following the 2016, but prior to the 2017, legislative session.

The final data analysis consisted of 271 statutes and four themes emerged from the data, including how hate crimes have been contextualized, inconsistencies in hate crime legislation coverage, differences in court procedures in hate crime cases, and state efforts to combat hate crimes.

Results of the study, published in the journal Victims & Offenders, showed that race, national origin, religion, sexual orientation, and disability were among the most recognized classes and populations in hate crime legislation. However, coverage differed greatly within these classifications due to how states conceptualize them.

"Every state legislates hate crimes differently, which results in differential justice in these cases across the nation," said Seth Fallik, Ph.D., lead author, associate professor and undergraduate coordinator in the School for Criminology and Criminal Justice within FAU's College of Social Work and Criminal Justice.

Among the study's key findings:

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California offered the most encompassing law, as it clearly delineates protected classes and locations, while conceptualizing both. The researchers say California should serve as a basis for moving forward, as it addresses the vagueness and inconsistent nature of other state statutes.

"There still much more work to be done. We suggest that state legislation provide greater conciseness and specificity to the law and courtroom procedures, be mindful of appropriate social science definitions, apply equal coverage to institutions, and provide victims' resources and public services through legislation," said Cassandra Atkin-Plunk, Ph.D., co-author, an associate professor, and associate director in FAU's College of Social Work and Criminal Justice. "By doing so, hate and its harms can be adequately addressed within the criminal justice system."

More information: Seth Wyatt Fallik et al, Defining Hate: A Content Analysis of State Hate Crime Legislation in the United States of America, Victims & Offenders (2022).

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