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 Divided by Gender: An Interview with Jane Elliott
On the day after Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated in 1968, a third-grade teacher in Riceville, Iowa felt impelled to give her students a visceral experience of discrimination that   MORE>>

 Gender Across Cultures: An Interview with Nonie Darwish
Nonie Darwish grew up in Gaza and Cairo. When she was 8 years old her father, a high-ranking military officer, was killed in an act of terrorism, making him a shahid, or marty  MORE>>

 Hate Studies Through a Constructivist and Critical Pedagogical Approach
Most of us are probably familiar with the child’s lament made during dinner: “I hate vegetables.” If you are a teacher, you may have heard students announce with conviction, “I hate homework.  MORE>>

 Transgender and Transsexual Identities: The Next Strange Fruit - Hate Crimes, Violence and Genocide Against the Global Trans-Communities
ABSTRACT
In this paper, we review the literature on global transgender hate crimes, violence, and abuse. We point out that it is possible to infer that this problem  MORE>>

 Reconceptualizing Anti-LGBT Hate Crimes as Burdening Expression and Association: A Case for Expanding Federal Hate Crime Legislation to Include Gender Identity and Sexual Orientation
INTRODUCTION
In 1968, Congress enacted Title 18 U.S.C. § 245, the first piece of federal hate crime legislation. This bill granted federal officers the authority to investigate an  MORE>>

 Purify and Destroy: The Political Uses of Massacre and Genocide
There is a popular movement in genocide research to portray genocide as arising from anything other than hate (e.g. Moshman, 2005). From a top-down perspective, this makes sense. After all, the case h  MORE>>

 Book Review: What Is Genocide?
This volume offers an answer to a question that has been debated within academia since the adoption of the 1948 Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. More recently, the  MORE>>

 Book Review: Bad Faith: The Danger of Religious Extremism
Finally someone has it right—that someone is Neil Kressel. Kressel is not entirely unknown in the field of hate studies. The William Paterson University professor authored Mass Hate (Plenum  MORE>>

 Busting the Bandito Boyz: Militarism, Masculinity, and the Hunting of Undocumented Persons in the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands
“Bandito heroes flourish in many cultures because they symbolize a virtually universal belief: that at times it’s necessary to break the law in order to obtain justice,” writes historian Paul Va  MORE>>

 Preface, Journal of Hate Studies, Volume 7
“I love mankind; it’s people I can’t stand.” This quotation from Charles Schultz’s Linus is brought to mind by the current volume of the Journal of Hate Studies. This year’s theme  MORE>>

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