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Disability and safety: rights, risks and layers of influence

Disability and safety: rights, risks and layers of influence. Dr Chih Hoong Sin Principal, Office for Public Management NDA Annual Conference 2011 13 October 2011. Overview of my presentation. Hearing from victims of disability hate crime A model – ‘layers of influence’

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Disability and safety: rights, risks and layers of influence

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  1. Disability and safety: rights, risks and layers of influence Dr Chih Hoong Sin Principal, Office for Public Management NDA Annual Conference 2011 13 October 2011 Restricted external

  2. Overview of my presentation • Hearing from victims of disability hate crime • A model – ‘layers of influence’ • Risks and rights ‘in action’ Restricted external

  3. Before we start… • The information may be distressing • The work is underpinned by a social model approach: • Impairment taken as starting point and NOT as explanation in itself for experiences • Language and terminology Restricted external

  4. Background • Drawing on: • a number of research studies I directed, particularly: • Disabled people’s experiences of targeted violence and hostility (Equality and Human Rights Commission) • Don’t stand by (Mencap) • practice engagement with police forces in England and with voluntary and community sector organisations • my experiences of ‘joining up’ with those who work on other types of hate crime Restricted external

  5. A ‘layers of influence’ model • Disabled people are embedded within nested hierarchies of social aggregates • Disability is only one factor of individual characteristics (e.g. ethnicity, gender, age, class, etc) • Family, friends and carers and their role (e.g. victimised, conditioning, etc) • Organisations/institutions (e.g. DPOs, health and social care, housing, police, etc) • Wider society and attitudes (e.g. attitudes towards disability, welfare reform, austerity measures) Restricted external

  6. A ‘layers of influence’ model • Characteristics of entities within each ‘layer’ have an influence, but not deterministic • Different entities within each layer can interact • Different entities across different layers can interact • Linkages/interactions are complex and are not pre-determined Restricted external

  7. What may it look like? The Winterbourne View scandal • Wider society and attitudes: • Disabled people seen as in need of care (in this case, people with learning disabilities) • Not only ‘in need of care’, but a particular form of ‘care’ - institutionalisation • Previous investigations/recommendations not had any impact in shifting this • Organisations/institutions: • Services have developed that sustain dependency • Majority of residential placements in UK are adults with learning disabilities • Not only institutionalisation, but out of area placements • Sidelined by personalisation agenda Restricted external

  8. What may it look like? The Winterbourne View scandal • Family members: • Once in segregated settings, socially isolated. Few visits from family • Family believe that care workers are providing good care • Carers: • Settings sustain unequal power – can lead to violence and abuse • ‘Predatory’ and ‘corrupted’ caregivers (individual motivation) • But also link back to wider attitudes about disability: ‘lesser’, ‘incomplete’, ‘lacking’ • Easily lends itself to dehumanising Restricted external

  9. Risk – How the individual is embedded within wider structure • Strong link between impairment and socio-economic status: • Especially so for mental health conditions and long-term conditions • Socio-economic differences also have strong geographical implications nationally, regionally and locally: • ‘aggregation of disabled people’ • Certain sub-groups ‘more at risk’ because of combinations of the above: • E.g. Disabled women, disabled children/young people • Certain sub-groups ‘more at risk’ of certain types of crimes because of combinations of the above: • E.g. sexual violence, property stolen with threat or use of violence, etc. • Interaction of disability and other real/perceived identities Restricted external

  10. Types of incidents • Physical • Verbal • Sexual • Targeted anti-social behaviour • Damage to property/theft • School bullying • Incidents perpetrated by statutory agency staff • Cyber bullying • Huge range, but prevalence of so-called ‘low level’ incidents with high impact Restricted external

  11. ‘Hot spots’ • ‘On the street’ and public transport • In and around home-based settings • In schools, colleges and at work • Residential settings • Different types of incidents, affecting different sub-groups of disabled people are played out unevenly in different ‘hot spots’ Restricted external

  12. Motivations • Not identifiable ‘villains’ (“adults leading everyday lives” – Home Office 2007) • Strangers, but also people ‘known’ to victim: • Within and around area of residence (e.g. neighbours) • Colleagues, people at school, etc. • Carers and other individuals providing services to disabled people • Family members and friends • Key factors: • Perceptions of vulnerability / dependency • Perceptions of threat • Actual or predicted behaviour of disabled person • Perpetrators thinking they can ‘get away with it’ • Control and unequal power relations Restricted external

  13. Quick summary • Risk not simply due to disability: • Other real/perceived identities • Risk not simply due to ‘in-person’ characteristics: • Poverty and deprivation • Geography • Accumulation of risk factors • Vulnerability is situational: • not explained by any inherent characteristic of victim or perpetrator or place – do not go looking for ‘villains’ or ‘victims’ • Motivations not always triggered into action Restricted external

  14. Impact and response • Impact: • Aggravation of existing conditions • Action and aggression – become ‘perpetrators’ • Fear of disclosure – Section 146 not used • Impact on family members of victims • Wider conditioning to ‘avoid’ and ‘accept’: • Ignore perpetrators • Restructure lives • Symbolic impact on other disabled people who have not experienced it • Implications: • Under-reporting, accepted as ‘everyday’ • Legislative instruments may not be used • Negative consequences for social inclusion / citizenship Restricted external

  15. Response from organisations/agencies • Protectionist (‘disabled people are vulnerable’): • In need of help and protection, rather than in need of justice and redress • Removed from real/perceived threat, rather than take action against perpetrators • Social policy rather than criminal justice policy • Deficiency (‘disabled people are lacking’): • Not believed, credibility doubted • Punitive (‘disabled people are threat’): • ‘Trouble-makers’, nuisance, perpetrators Restricted external

  16. Rights and risks • Rights-based approach can be competing or contradictory (e.g. right to private life and right for protection is that private life is harmful) • More structured and explicit processes for managing risk, especially when risk is ongoing or posed by perpetrators known to the victim (e.g. ‘mate crime’, personalisation) • Balancing act, but disabled people must be involved • Recognise multiple identities (i.e. not only disabled) • Recognise structural factors – material and attitudinal (e.g. material deprivation, ‘minoritised’ identities) Restricted external

  17. For the full EHRC and Mencap research reports, visit: www.opm.co.uk For the animated video clip, visit: www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jw3tMPuKSKc or view via OPM’s website. For more information Restricted external

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