Drawing on queer theory and post-structuralism, this article explores two "gay bashings," the murders of Alain Brousseau and Aaron Webster. In both cases, we argue that the application of anti-hate crime legislation reveals the troubling nature of attempts to legally fix sexual identities. The law imagines gayness to be innate and obvious. These cases show that sexual identity is fluid and contingent. Our study also shows that, through the application of hate-crime law, sexual identification is not necessarily self-determined. Politicized communities, legal actors, assailants, and media all participate in naming someone's "gayness.
Owing to our failure to acknowledge the complexity and diversity of gender identity, gender and gend...
Jacobs and Potter’s work is a unique entry into the debate on hate crime. It injects a much needed n...
Building upon the renewed attention to the ways in which criminology may be ‘queered’ (o...
En s’inspirant de la théorie gaie et du post-structuralisme, les auteurs analysent deux actes de vi...
This dissertation analyzes personal and institutional narratives that shape the Canadian phenomenon ...
Contemporary researchers have gathered widespread evidence of same-sex practice and desire with no i...
This Article proceeds as follows. In Part II, the author catalogs the history of anti-gay hate crime...
Over the past three decades, debates in Canada surrounding the introduction of human rights protecti...
Questioning the emancipatory potential of hate crimes activism for sexual and gender non-normative p...
This paper investigates how employing neoliberal discourses of equal rights, anti-discrimination law...
Hate crime laws in both Canada and the United States purport to promote equality using the language ...
Over the years, Canada has become more and more multicultural. During the 1970’s, the government beg...
This article identifies discourses which serve to ‘normalise’ experiences of anti-LGBT (Lesbian, Ga...
The Ventura County Superior Court declared a mistrial in June, 2011, after three years of litigation...
This paper will explore how the criminal justice system’s ingrained prejudice against LGBTQ2S+ peopl...
Owing to our failure to acknowledge the complexity and diversity of gender identity, gender and gend...
Jacobs and Potter’s work is a unique entry into the debate on hate crime. It injects a much needed n...
Building upon the renewed attention to the ways in which criminology may be ‘queered’ (o...
En s’inspirant de la théorie gaie et du post-structuralisme, les auteurs analysent deux actes de vi...
This dissertation analyzes personal and institutional narratives that shape the Canadian phenomenon ...
Contemporary researchers have gathered widespread evidence of same-sex practice and desire with no i...
This Article proceeds as follows. In Part II, the author catalogs the history of anti-gay hate crime...
Over the past three decades, debates in Canada surrounding the introduction of human rights protecti...
Questioning the emancipatory potential of hate crimes activism for sexual and gender non-normative p...
This paper investigates how employing neoliberal discourses of equal rights, anti-discrimination law...
Hate crime laws in both Canada and the United States purport to promote equality using the language ...
Over the years, Canada has become more and more multicultural. During the 1970’s, the government beg...
This article identifies discourses which serve to ‘normalise’ experiences of anti-LGBT (Lesbian, Ga...
The Ventura County Superior Court declared a mistrial in June, 2011, after three years of litigation...
This paper will explore how the criminal justice system’s ingrained prejudice against LGBTQ2S+ peopl...
Owing to our failure to acknowledge the complexity and diversity of gender identity, gender and gend...
Jacobs and Potter’s work is a unique entry into the debate on hate crime. It injects a much needed n...
Building upon the renewed attention to the ways in which criminology may be ‘queered’ (o...