Hate crimes are nothing new: crimes in which the victim is selected because of the victim\u27s membership in some distinctive group (be it racial, ethnic, religious, or other) have been with us as long as such groups have coexisted within legal systems. What is relatively new is their recognition and designation as a discrete phenomenon. But as appellations like sexual harassment and community policing have begun to teach us, words are only the beginning of the life cycle of a new socio-legal concept. What follows are debates about whether the new category is really a coherent one, what activities should fall within and outside of it, what legal and social strategies should regulate these activities, and, inevitably, whether the whole t...