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Official Report Meeting date: 29 November 2011

Subordinate Legislation Committee 29 November 2011

The power to modify section 1 is about modifying the circumstances in which an offence relating to offensive behaviour at a regulated football match can be committed.
Official Report Meeting date: 6 September 2011

Justice Committee 06 September 2011

Offensive Behaviour at Football and Threatening Communications (Scotland) Bill Item 2 is the Offensive Behaviour at Football and Threatening Communicatio...
Questions and Answers Date lodged: 16 April 2014

S4O-03122

To ask the Scottish Government whether it considers that the Offensive Behaviour at Football and Threatening Communications (Scotland) Act 2012 criminalises football supporters.
Official Report Meeting date: 19 December 2023

Health, Social Care and Sport Committee 19 December 2023

We are doing a piece of work with the affiliated national associations—the Scottish Youth Football Association, Scottish Women’s Football and the Scottish Amateur Football Association—to understand how we can have an impact on parental behaviour.
Official Report Meeting date: 18 April 2023

Health, Social Care and Sport Committee 18 April 2023

It is a question of constantly getting across the message that something is not banter but offensive. People have to be asked whether they understand the impact that such behaviour has on people.
Last updated: 3 March 2023

Minutes of the meeting held on 13 December 2022

It’s provided a new battleground where those who are invested in these types of behaviour have access to others 24 hours a day.
Official Report Meeting date: 1 February 2018

Meeting of the Parliament 01 February 2018

The recently published report, “Behaviour in Scottish Schools Research 2016”, highlights that overall pupils are well behaved and that violent incidents, especially those involving a knife, are—thankfully—very rare.
Last updated: 9 May 2025

PB_25_paper061

S6M-16977: James Dornan: Recognising the Work of Realgrassroots— That the Parliament recognises what it sees as the hard work, over a period of more than 15 years, by Realgrassroots and the Children and Young People’s Commissioner Scotland in seeking to ensure the safety and protection of young footballers while contracted to senior football clubs; commends the previous Public Petitions Committee on its report, PE1319: Improving youth football in Scotland, which was published in June 2020 and was based on more than a decade of hearing evidence from a wide range of stakeholders throughout Scottish football; notes the support for the committee's recommendations, in particular on registration and compensation; further notes the committee's reported criticisms of the Scottish Football Association (SFA) and Scottish Professional Football League (SPFL) regarding what it sees as their apparent unwillingness to address some issues within Scottish football in a timely and effective manner; is disappointed that the committee's recommendations have, it believes, still not been fully accepted or implemented by the SFA and SPFL; notes with concern reports that the rules of the SFA and SPFL may breach competition law and that complaints have been filed with the Competition and Markets Authority; further notes the calls for both the SFA and SPFL to comply fully with the committee's recommendations, and with the calls made by Realgrassroots and the Children and Young People’s Commissioner Scotland to ensure the protection of Scotland's young players, including those in the Glasgow Cathcart constituency, from any unfair or unlawful practices, and notes the calls on the Scottish Government to urge the SFA to ensure that the committee’s recommendations are implemented, and that any anti-competitive practices are ended, as quickly as possible.
Questions and Answers Date answered: 7 June 2013

S4W-14651

To ask the Scottish Government, further to the answer to question S4O-02044 by Roseanna Cunningham on 25 April 2013, whether the conviction under section 6 was for the use of language deemed (a) sectarian or (b) otherwise offensive. A conviction for the offence of “threatening communications”, under section 6 of the Offensive Behaviour at Football and Threatening Communications (Scotland) Act 2012, may be for the communication of material which threatens serious violence or threatening material intended to stir up hatred on religious grounds.
Last updated: 2 April 2024

PB_2022_095

To provide a compensation scheme to accompany a surrender scheme arranged by the Scottish Ministers under the Offensive Weapons Act 2019 to operate for three months beginning with 1 July 2022 for those offensive weapons that will become illegal to possess on domestic premises when Part 4 of that Act is commenced.

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