Question

"Interpreting and Experiencing Anti-Queer Violence: Race, Class and gender Differences Among LGBT Hate Crime Victims," Doug Meyer
Doug Meyer uses an intersectional approach and a qualitative methodology to explore how victims of violence in the LBGT community experience victimization differently according to race, class gender and sexuality. Meyer finds that multiple intersecting oppressed statuses make the identification of hate crime more complicated for all but middle and upper class White gay men. Those statutes may then serve primarily the interests of those White men, not the interests of lesbian and bisexual women, and particularly not LGBT people of color.
The degree to which queer people are willing to determine that violence is based on their sexuality varies by:
a. the severity of the crime
b. degrees of homophobia in the community
c. intersections in the race, class, gender and sexuality of the victim
d. how likely the victim thinks the violence will reoccur

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