Académique Documents
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2. Statistics/information.
a) A survey found that 48% of trans people under 26 said they had
attempted suicide, and 30% said they had done so in the past year, while 59%
said they had at least considered doing so. / By comparison, about 6% of all
16- to 24-year-olds say they have attempted suicide, according to the Adult
Psychiatry Morbidity Survey.
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2014/nov/19/young-transgender-
suicide-attempts-survey
b) psychological and mental health issues that might lead children to believe
they were born the wrong gender.
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2017/jan/11/bbc-film-on-child-transgender-
issues-worries-activist
c) http://www.nhs.uk/Livewell/Transhealth/Pages/local-gender-identity-
clinics.aspx
i) There is a total of only 8 gender clinics across the entirety of
the uk.
d) http://www.stonewall.org.uk/media/lgbt-facts-and-figures
e) In 2015/16, there were 7,194 sexual orientation hate crimes, 3,629
disability hate crimes and 858 transgender identity hate crimes.As mentioned
above for race or religiously aggravated offences, recording improvements
are likely to be a factor in the increase in offences recorded by the police. This
is also the case for increases in disability, sexual orientation and transgender
identity hate crime. In addition to ONSs statement previously given, anecdotal
evidence provided by some forces have mentioned there have been drives to
improve the reporting and the recording of hate crime, as well as further
training of staff. The increase across all three strands since 2014/15 (44% for
disability, 29% for sexual orientation and 41% for transgender) may suggest
improved identification of hate crime as a factor, but it is possible that some of
the increase may be due to an increase in actual criminal hate behaviour.
These could be genuine increases in hate crimes or increases in the numbers
of victims coming forward to report a hate crime.For 40 police forces, sexual
orientation hate crime was the second most commonly recorded hate crime.
In the majority (41) of forces transgender identity hate crime was the least
commonly recorded hate crime (Appendix Table 2.01).
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/
559319/hate-crime-1516-hosb1116.pdf
4. b) Interview Techniques.
- Research what you are going to film - Get basic knowledge about your
interviewee.
- Keep the questions simple. - You are trying to teach someone through your
documentary, make sure the questions fit the person.
- Open-ended Questions are preferred rather than closed-ended questions.
- Leading questions are undesirable.
- Who, what when, where, why, how,
- Follow up questions - ask questions following the topic of the interviewee
- Challenge what they say, if you dont understand what they
said, politely ask them to explain it. (If you dont understand it, neither will the
audience.)
- Always listen to what they are saying.
- - incase they say something offensive or if they dont answer a
question correctly so that you can ask them to answer the question again.
- Get the interviewee to say their name and their profession as well as get them
to spell their name if they have a different spelling.
- Is there anything you would like to add? always ask this at the end of the
interview so that the interviewee can add some additional information on the topic.
- Always thank them for their time and co-operation at the end.
- Dress appropriately.
- Dont have an attitude.
- Stay neutral. (Dont make the interview biased towards one opinion.)
- Minimise your own voice.
- Its not about you. (KEEP YOUR OPINION OUT OF IT.)
- If you miss a question, try to return to the subject and ask it.
- Avoid filming twice in order to keep the continuity, try to get the
whole interview perfectly done in one turn.