NCJ Number
              181425
          Date Published
  May 2000
Length
              28 pages
          Annotation
              This monograph describes five demonstration programs developed by State and local agencies for confronting and reducing hate crimes.
          Abstract
              The Simon Wiesenthal Center’s National Institutes Against Hate Crimes brings together interdisciplinary teams of law enforcement professionals from cities, regions and States for a 4-day training program. The San Diego Police Department and the Anti-Defamation League’s Victim Assistance Project responds to hate crime victims’ emotional and practical needs. The Los Angeles County District Attorney’s JOLT (Juvenile Offenders Learning Tolerance) program teaches faculty and staff at K-12 schools how to recognize and deal with hate problems, attempts to divert juveniles involved in bias incidents and less serious hate crimes and aggressively prosecutes teenagers who commit serious hate crimes or fail to complete the diversion program. The Maine Department of the Attorney General’s Civil Rights Team Project uses teams of students and faculty members to promote awareness of bias and prejudice in Maine’s public high, middle and elementary schools. The Massachusetts Governor’s Task Force on Hate Crimes uses civil rights teams in high schools similar to the Maine project.
          Date Published: May 1, 2000
Similar Publications
- Expanding on the factor structure and construct validity of the Short-Term Assessment of Risk and Treatability (START) in a general correctional sample
- A gonosomal marker multiplex to aid in mixture interpretation
- Forcible, Drug-Facilitated, and Incapacitated Rape in Relation to Substance Use Problems: Results from a National Sample of College Women
