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Hate Incident Reporting Initiative to Strengthen Engagement in Communities (HIRISE+)

Policeman stands guard in silhouette at pride parade, with rainbow flags in view.
A research-to-translation project to assess decisions to report hate crimes from LGB+ adults and law enforcement
  • Client
    National Institute of Justice
  • Dates
    March 2023 – February 2026

Problem

The vast majority of law enforcement agencies report zero anti-LGB+ hate crimes, even as those crimes seem to be increasing.

LGB+ adults are 2.7 times more likely to be victims of violent crimes than non-LGB+ adults, and many of these incidents go unreported or fail to be classified as hate crimes. Broadly, hate crime appears to be increasing. Hate crimes reported by the FBI’s Uniform Crime Report (UCR) increased by 40% from 2015 to 2020, and anti-LGB+ violence accounted for one of every six of these incidents. Yet approximately 90% of law enforcement agencies across the country still report zero hate crimes each year.

Thus NORC, with support from the National Institute of Justice, designed this project to study how both LGB+ victims and law enforcement decide to report violence as hate crimes and plan to use results to identify policy and procedural recommendations to increase hate crime reporting among LGB+ populations.

Solution

NORC is using mixed-methods, research-to-translation approach to understand how bias-motivated crimes are reported.

This study employs a three-stage, mixed-methods research strategy to investigate how LGB+ victims and law enforcement make decisions to report hate crimes in the Southeast, Midwest, Southwest, West Coast. Working alongside NORC on this initiative are representatives from the Police Executive Research Forum (PERF) and four police departments in local jurisdictions in each region.  

  • Stage 1 will focus on mapping the context of four regionally diverse jurisdictions through a quantitative web survey of local LGB+ adults and an environmental scan of policies and procedures related to hate crime reporting.
  • Stage 2 will leverage in-depth interviews to evaluate experiences of hate crime reporting from the perspective of LGB+ victims of violence and law enforcement.
  • Stage 3 will build upon results from Stages 1 and 2 to develop and disseminate evidence-based recommendations for law enforcement to increase the reporting of bias-motivated violence as hate crimes.

Result

Our results will support efforts to encourage more accurate reporting of anti-LGB+ hate crimes.

Results from data collection will be used to create a series of evidence-based policy and practice recommendation for law enforcement to strengthen relationships with LGB+ communities and improve reporting of anti-LGB+ hate crimes. Findings will be disseminated through both academic and mainstream channels, as well as used to inform tools and resources for use by law enforcement working with LGB+ victims of violence.

Disclaimer: This project is supported by Award NIJ-22-GG-00998-RESS, awarded by the National Institute of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice. The opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed on this site are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect those of the Department of Justice.

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Project Leads

“By seeking to understand how both victims and law enforcement decide to report and classify hate crimes, our project is well-positioned to identify opportunities and recommendations for improving reporting channels for victims of bias-motivated violence.”

Senior Research Scientist

“By seeking to understand how both victims and law enforcement decide to report and classify hate crimes, our project is well-positioned to identify opportunities and recommendations for improving reporting channels for victims of bias-motivated violence.”

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