May 16 2009

louisejones

Hate Free Highland

http://www.hatefreehighland.org/ 

Last week I was co-facilitating on a training day for professionals who have already been on our 3 day Sexual Health and Relationships Education (SHARE) course and were looking for an update day. A key resource that my colleague Jane Groves and I highlighted was the excellent new toolkit developed by Learning and Teaching Scotland and LGBT Youth Scotland on Homphobia and Homophobic Bullying. The toolkit for teachers with lesson plans can be found here.

In using materials described above it’s key to find out exactly what reporting mechanisms are in place locally, of course every school and authority will have policies in place, but finding out what else is in place to support and report both locally and nationally is crucial.

I’d like to highlight this brand new site for anyone in Highland who wishes to report hate crimes. The Hate Free Highland campaign is a multi-agency led initiative supported by the Highland Community Planning Partnership. Some text from the site.

A Hate Incident is defined as:

Any incident, which may or may not constitute a criminal offence, which is perceived by the victim, or any other person, as being motivated by prejudice or hate.

A hate incident can occur because of a person’s age, disability, gender, race or ethnic origin, religion or belief, sexual orientation or social background.

In other words it is when one person targets another through physical, verbal or any other form of abuse and you believe this abuse has been motivated by one of the following factors:

Age: where an incident is directed to a person because of their age
disability: this is sometimes called disablism and involves incidents directed at people with a wide range of disabilities such as physical or sensory impairments, learning difficulties and mental illness
gender: where an incident is directed towards people from the transgender community, as well as women or men
race or ethnic origin: this is often called racism and includes incidents directed at anyone on the grounds of race, colour, ethnic origin, nationality or national origins
religion or belief: where an incident takes place towards a person because of their faith
sexual orientation: this is sometimes called homophobia and includes an incident directed at a person who is or is thought to be lesbian, gay, transvestite, transsexual, or bisexual.
Social background: where an incident is directed at someone as a result of class, income, occupation, educational level or from a combination of these factors.

It is the understanding of victim or the witness that is important in defining a hate incident. In other words if someone thinks that an incident has been motivated by any of the factors listed above they should be reported on this website.

It’s very clear that absolutely everyone living, learning or working in a school community has a responsibility to tackle homophobia, homophobic or racist bullying whether it takes place in school or online, having the confidence to challenge and advertising reporting routes are key.

Further cyberbullying information and links to resources can be found here on the Highland E-Safety Site. Other sources of information Stonewall and Young Scot One Scotland.

 

One response so far


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One Response to “Hate Free Highland”

  1.   jye richardson 16 May 2009 at 11:50 pm 1

    Great post Louise – I agree entirely. Having had to deal with a recent homophobic incident and the apathy from many folk towards their responsibilities in this regard, I know just how much of a hidden problem institutionalised homophobia is in many schools. My own time at secondary school was blighted and destroyed by this sort of thing and I left school with hardly any qualifications, haven just grown to hate the place and given up. I would hate to see this happen to any of the kids in my care and challenge this attitude and behaviour on an almost daily basis…
    The toolkit is an excellent resource – I just wonder how many schools have filed it away rather than tackle the issue head on by putting policy, proceedure and good practice into place as well as publicly challenging prejudice against LGBT folk. I refuse to let my relationships become reduced to the status of playground catcalls and honestly believe that in a fair and just society it should just not be an issue.
    Good on Highland for dealing with this in such an upfront way – and good on you for championing this incredibly important issue…

    Jaye

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