Abstract

This two-part article addresses the “Who?” question in the hate speech debate: namely, which characteristics, social identities or statuses should or should not be treated as protected characteristics within a body of hate speech laws? Using United Kingdom incitement to hatred laws as a focal point, the article outlines and critically appraises five broad approaches to specification. Part 1 deals with consistency specification, which highlights norms of consistency both within incitement to hatred law itself and in relation to other laws, practical specification, which focuses on the ostensible goals or apparent aims of incitement to hatred laws, and formal specification, which looks at the formal qualities of the characteristics themselves and to the different forms of people’s relationships with those characteristics. And Part 2 considers functional specification, which concentrates on the underlying or real functions, purposes or objectives of incitement to hatred laws, and democratic specification, which appeals to democratic procedures as well as to democratic values, norms and principles that speak to the proper scope of incitement to hatred laws. Along the way I shall also critically assess a range of substantive arguments about which particular characteristics should or should not be covered by incitement to hatred laws given the aforementioned approaches. My main conclusion shall be that each of the approaches has its strengths and weakness and that, partly because of this, no single approach is adequate by itself as a tool for specifying the proper scope of incitement to hatred laws, but also, by the same token, no approach should be ruled out entirely. Instead, the best strategy is one that combines together all five approaches in reasonable ways given the law, the characteristic and the context.

Highlights

  • This is the first part of a two-part article addressing the “Who?” question in the hate speech debate

  • Again, what should legislators do in the meantime whilst they wait for compelling evidence to come in? One strategy is to hold off creating any new stirring up hatred offences until the results are in. This is precisely the view of the Joint Committee on Human Rights.[212]. The problem with this approach, is that some groups may continue to be the objects of incitement to hatred whilst they wait for governmental authorities to create or obtain compelling evidence, weigh it, draft an action plan, consult with stakeholders, and attempt to get legislation passed through both Houses of Parliament

  • One potentially relevant distinction is between immutable characteristics, that is, characteristics that are unchanging over time and that remain with the individual throughout his or her lifetime, and changeable characteristics, as in, characteristics that do change over time and that do not always remain with the individual

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Summary

Hate speech laws and protected characteristics

I want to begin by clarifying the nature of the “Who?” question. There are numerous characteristics, social identities or statuses that either currently are or conceivably could be brought under the scope of hate speech laws.[5]. · religion including religious beliefs, practices, or affiliations as well as lack thereof (e.g., Canada,[106] Chile,[107] Connecticut (US),[108] Croatia,[109] Denmark,[110] gland and Wales (UK),[111] Finland,[112] France,[113] the Netherlands,[114] Massachusetts (US),[115] Northern Ireland (UK),[116] Queensland (Australia),[117] Republic of Ireland,[118] Russia,[119] South Africa,[120] Tasmania (Australia)121);.

Consistency specification
Practical specification
Formal specification
Immutable versus changeable characteristics
Chosen versus unchosen characteristics
Constitutive versus peripheral characteristics
Internal life versus external life characteristics
Findings
Characteristics we all share versus characteristics we do not all share
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