id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_obmt2j5dhfeejf5tb5lkywbqsq Doug Meyer Evaluating the Severity of Hate-motivated Violence: Intersectional Differences among LGBT Hate Crime Victims 2010 17 .pdf application/pdf 7774 544 55 Previous studies examining the severity of hate-motivated violence have focused primarily on the psychological effects of hate crime (Iganski, 2001; McDevitt et al., 2001; Rose and These studies also tend to overlook the relevance of social class in structuring LGBT people's violent experiences (Dunbar, 2006; Moran, 2000). groups, as poor LGBT people of colour, for instance, may interpret and experience anti-queer violence quite differently than working-class LGBT people of Still, in this study, the most salient differences in terms of how respondents evaluated the severity of their violent experiences were between middleclass white respondents and low-income LGBT people of colour. Poor and working-class people of colour, in contrast, were usually compared with individuals perceived to have experienced more violence. He was a big help.' White, middleclass LGBT people encountered this type of response – in which others emphasized the severity of the violence – more often than poor and working-class ./cache/work_obmt2j5dhfeejf5tb5lkywbqsq.pdf ./txt/work_obmt2j5dhfeejf5tb5lkywbqsq.txt