Canadian Policing Research Catalogue

Police officers' perceptions of gender-motivated violence in Canada / by Ryan Scrivens.

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Location

Canadian Policing Research

Resource

e-Books

Alternate Title

Police perceptions of gender-motivated violence

Authors

Publishers

Bibliography

Includes bibliographical references.

Description

1 online resource (viii, 112 pages)

Note

"September, 2011".
Thesis (MA)--University of Ontario Institute of Technology, 2011.

Summary

Police officers' perceptions of gender-motivated violence against women have been overlooked in hate crime research. In an attempt to fill a gap in the hate crime, violence against women, and policing hate crime literature, the author examines how nine police officers understand gender-motivated violence in Canada using vignettes, sentence-competition tasks, and an interview guide. Here, participants are asked about their perceptions of and experience with hate crime and gender-motivated hate crime against women. Results indicate that the majority of participants do not perceive hypothetical instance of violence against women as hate crime, all of which is a product of: victim-perpetrator relationships, ambiguous motives and alternative motives, and definitional constraints with legal terms. Equally, factors and conditions that influence police officers' perceptions relate to: the typical victims of hate notion, police routine and experience with hate crime and gender-motivated violence, hate crime legislation, hate crime policies and procedures for police, and hate crime training for police.

Subject

Online Access

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