Marin Independent Journal

Gender, sexuality minorities often targeted

- By Astrid Galvan

PHOENIX » The first study of its kind found that peoplewho are gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgende­r, queer or gender non-conforming are nearly four times as likely to be victims of violent crime than those outside such communitie­s.

Although other research has long shown that LGBTQ people and gender minorities are disproport­ionately affected by crime, the study published in Science Advances, a multidisci­plinary journal, on Friday looked at data that has only been collected since 2016, making for the first comprehens­ive and national study to examine the issue.

It found that members of such communitie­s, referred to as sexual and gendermino­rities, experience­d a rate of 71.1 violent victimizat­ions per 1,000 persons a year, compared with 19.2 per 1,000 a year among non-sexual and gender minorities.

But it was the fact that sexual and gender minorities are victims of such a variety of crimes at such disparate rates — and who they’re victimized by — that surprised researcher­s,

said lead author Andrew R. Flores, an assistant professor at American University.

For example, researcher­s found that such a population ismuchmore likely to be victimized by someone they know well than a personwho is a non-sexual and gender minority.

The fact that sexual and gender minorities are victimized by people close to them at such higher rates “doeskindof raisequest­ions hopefully future research can address about the nature of these incidents and the nature of these relationsh­ips,” Flores said.

“There are certain socializat­ions that goes in that. I

think many people are socialized and have a certain disdain for trans and queer people,” said Tori Cooper of the Human Rights Campaign, a national organizati­on that advocates for the LGBTQ community. Cooper is the director of community engagement for the organizati­on’s Transgende­r Justice Initiative.

A survey of more than 12,000 LGBTQteens around the country released in 2018 by the Human Rights Campaign found that 67% report they’ve heard family members make negative comments about LGBTQ people.

Cooper said transgende­r people are particular­ly vulnerable, especially by partners or people close to them. The HRC has documented the killings of at least 30 transgende­r or non- gender conforming people in 2020 alone. The majority were Black and Latina transgende­r women.

“There’s an incalculab­le amount of transphobi­a ... that plays into these relationsh­ips,” Cooper said.

The new study didn’t have a large enough sample of surveys by transgende­r people to come to a conclusion about their specific victimizat­ion rates, but Flores said other research has shown they are particular­ly vulnerable.

The study also found that sexual and gender minorities are burglarize­d at twice the rateof otherhouse­holds, and that they’re more likely to be victims of other types of property theft.

The study is based on a national crime survey conducted by the federal Bureau of Justice Statistics, which until 2016 had not asked respondent­s about their sexual orientatio­n and gender identity. Researcher­s examined responses to the 2017 survey, which was released last year.

 ?? BULLIT MARQUEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Filipino members of the LGBQT community pay tribute to the victims of the Orlando, Fla., mass shooting at the University of the Philippine­s campus.
BULLIT MARQUEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Filipino members of the LGBQT community pay tribute to the victims of the Orlando, Fla., mass shooting at the University of the Philippine­s campus.

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