Finding collections relating to d/Deaf, disabled and neurodiverse people

One of the aims of our project is to make collections relating to d/Deaf, disabled and neurodivergent people more visible – and to share some of the objects our Fellows and Trainees are discovering.

Some will have quite obvious connections to disabled people’s lives – a walking stick, some braille or images of disabled people. But we will also be exploring less obvious connections too. Sometimes the significance of an object is its owner; its part in a bigger story, or the way someone with lived experience of disability has responded to it. In this way we hope to broaden the ways that d/Deaf, disabled and neurodivergent stories are told.

Collections

HANDS UP TO STOP HATE CRIME' (Poster)

2013

MOL.2013.158

ID: This poster with a white background features the title ‘HATE: Disability, race, religion, sexual orientation, transgender, there’s no room for hate’. It goes on to read ‘Merseyside Police Summer of Action’. The poster’s main slogan is ‘Hands Up To Stop Hate Crime’. To the right of this, there is an illustration of silhouettes of...

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Rights information: Courtesy of Museum of Liverpool

Description

ID: This poster with a white background features the title ‘HATE: Disability, race, religion, sexual orientation, transgender, there’s no room for hate’. It goes on to read ‘Merseyside Police Summer of Action’.

The poster’s main slogan is ‘Hands Up To Stop Hate Crime’. To the right of this, there is an illustration of silhouettes of five hands reaching upwards. The hand silhouettes are made up of various job titles from within the police service, including ‘PCSO, analyst, officer, call handler, detective, dog handler, secretary, special constable’.

This poster was produced by Merseyside Police as part of their Summer of Action initiative in 2013. It encourages various branches of police service workers to come together to fight against hate crime.

Hate crime is classed as any crime that has demonstrated or been motivated by hostility based on race, religion, disability, sexual orientation or gender identity. In 2023, 13,777 instances of hate crime where a person had faced discrimination based on disability were recorded by police in England and Wales.

Disability hate crimes are often under-reported for many reasons. These can include lack of awareness of what constitutes hate crime, how to report it, or how to support people to report their experiences.

Advocacy groups, charities and organisations promoting disability rights continue to campaign to raise awareness of how to identify and report these offences, as well as supporting victims, their families and those around them.