RACE, RACISM AND THE LAW
S
peaking Truth to Power!!

 

Legacy - Hate Crimes

Eliminating Racial Health Care Disparities: Public Option - Necessary but not Sufficient!  Nov 12, 5:00pm - 6:30pm (See, Webinars)

                         UNITS
Intro: Institutional Racism                                         x
01 Racial Groups                                             x
02 Citizenship Rights                                             x
03 Justice                                             x
04 Basic Needs                                             x
05 Intersectionality                                             x
06 Worldwide                                             x
   
   
 

Web Editor

  Vernellia Randall
Professor of Law
The University of Dayton
   
   
  OTHER WEBSITES
Personal Website                                 x
Race and Health                                x
Academic Support                                x
The JD Project                                x
Legal Education                                x
 20th Century Racism in the 21st Century
The Legacy of Racism in the Southern Region of the United States of America

 

III. The legacy

A. Hate Crime:

The legal category of hate crime in the United States is only a decade old. The U.S. Congress defines it as a crime in which the defendant intentionally selects a victim, or in the case of a property crime, the roperty that is the object of the crime, because of the actual or perceived race, color, national origin, ethnicity, gender, disability, or sexual orientation of any person.

The number one problem today with hate crime is underreporting according to the Center for Democratic Renewal (CDR). The federal government counts hate crimes nationally, but state law enforcement agencies can choose whether or not to do so. CDR reports that hate crimes are far more common than the public realizes, that many victims are afraid to report these crimes, and that some local government agencies and university authorities do not like to report hate crime incidents for fear of bad publicity.

The problem is particularly acute in the South, where some law enforcement agencies view this category as a form of affirmative action, another "benefit" for people of color.6

The case of Alabama is striking. In 1998, Alabama did not report a single hate crime. Just one year later, in 1999, a gay man in northern Alabama was badly beaten and burned to death on a pile of tires because of his sexual orientation. This same year a cross was burned on the lawn of an African-American man in the state capital. In August 2000, new Salvadoran immigrants living in Mobile find KKK literature outside their home. And in November, 2000 an African American family that moves into a predominantly white neighborhood in Montgomery finds a KKK note outside their door.

In other parts of the country hundreds of hate crimes are reported. This data collection allows citizens and government officials alike to design programs to combat this phenomenon and prevent it.

The hate crimes reported in the South are alarming. CDR found that between 1990 and 1997, more than 400 black and multiracial churches had been burned or firebombed in the United States, the majority in the South. This constitutes a direct violation of Article 5 of CERD. During this period more than 20,000 people of color had their churches destroyed at property damages exceeding $US 25 million. Attacks on churches over a century old were particularly devastating to Black communities in what was seen as an attempt to obliterate their history and culture.(2)

The Souths special history makes hate group activity, hate speech and hate crime, particularly menacing for victim groups. While the KKK is no longer part of the state in the South, even as recently as 1998 over two dozen state legislators in Mississippi were members of the Council of Conservative Citizens, a well--known hate group.(3)

'An attitude expressed to CDR during recent interviews with law enforcement officials in Alabama.


Back Next

 
[FrontPage Save Results Component]

Submit for Periodic Updates
Update List

CHAPTERS
What is Race?                                             x
Racial Groups                                             x
Minority Status                                             x
Defining Racism                                             x
Race Relations                                             x
 
What's New!                                             x
Obama's Administration                     x
Whitest Law Schools                                             x
Newsletter                                             x
Webinars                                                x
Racism Surveys                                             x
Awards                                             x
Comments                                             x
Search this Site                                             x
Contact                                             x
 


 

 

Same level:
Introduction ] Historical Background ] [ Legacy - Hate Crimes ] Legacy - Criminal Justice ] Legacy - Economic Justice ] Legacy- Environmental Racism ] Conclusions - Challenges for Regional NGOs ]
Child Level:
Home ] Up ]
Parent Level:
Defining Race Racism and Racial Discrimination ] Signs of Racism ] Racism v Colorism - A Wrong Headed Debate ] The Matrix: Coding Counter Racism ] In Racism, Little Things Are a Big Deal! ] Legacy of Racism in the South ] Best we just stow the cannon ] Obama and Health Care ] Santa, Jesus and the Symbolism of White Supremacy ] School Shootings and White Denial ] Institutional Racism ] The Racism of "Lootie" ] Color Blind or Just Plain Blind? ] Post-racialism or Targeted Universalism? ] Holder's Speech Lets White People Off the Hook ]
Units:
[Race and Racial Groups] [Citizenship Rights]  [Justice and Race] [Patterns of Basic Needs] [Intersectionality Issues]  [Human Rights]

 

Always Under Construction!

Always Under Construction!

Copyright @ 1997, 2008. 
Vernellia R. Randall

All Rights Reserved.

 

In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, some material on this website is provided for comment, background information, research and/or educational purposes only, without permission from the copyright owner(s), under the "fair use" provisions of the federal copyright laws. These materials may not be distributed for other purposes without permission of the copyright owner(s).


Last Updated:
Monday, November 02, 2009  

You are visitor number
Hit Counter  
Since Sept. 11, 2001  
Race and Racial Group Unit

Thanks to Derrick Bell and his pioneer work: 
Race, Racism and American Law
(1993).