Co-PI: Christopher P. Scheitle (West Virginia University)
Funded By: National Science Foundation and the Rice University Faculty Initiatives Fund
Topic Areas: Race
This project seeks to better understand religion-related hate crimes. Existing data assessing criminal victimization and bias-motivated crimes do not adequately measure the religion of victims or the role of religion in bias-motivated crimes. This project includes a nationally representative survey of over 2,000 adults (with over-samples of religious minority groups) to assess individuals' experiences with victimization and whether they perceived that religious bias was a motivator for their being victimized.
Project findings will be shared with law enforcement, communities, and policy-makers in an effort to prevent religion-related crimes and serve the victims of such crimes. In addition to the survey (which will be publicly archived for others to use after the end of the grant), this project will produce articles and presentations.
As a supplement to this project, additional funding was provided to conduct 20 follow-up interviews with survey respondents. The FIF funding will also support programming dedicated to the topic of religion-related bias and hate, allowing for the amplification of project data to religious and civic leaders.