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FBI Reports:
Hate Crimes and
Anti-Gay Violence
All Things Queer:
Youth Statistics
Human Rights
Watch:
Hatred in the
Hallways
Gay & Lesbian
Population Census
Harris
Interactive
GLBT Surveys
Born Different

Read About the
Demographics of the
GLBT Population
GLBT Myths &
Misconceptions
Official
Statements About
GLBT Issues
GLBT
Glossary
Of Commonly
Used Terms
GLBT
Critical
Incidents

Interesting Stats
What portion of
the
world population is
thought to be gay
or lesbian in
every culture and in
every period
in history?
1 in 10
What portion of the
GLBT population have
graduated from college?
37%
What portion of the
GLBT population is
Democrat?
67-71%
Republican?
8-14%
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GLBT STATISTICS
Findings: A
Pervasive Climate of Hate
Anti-Gay Violence, Harassment and Discrimination in Birmingham
Statement to the press by the Gay and Lesbian Alliance of Alabama, June
30, 1999, Community Room, Birmingham Civil Rights Institute:
Following the murder of Billy Jack Gaither, the Gay and Lesbian Alliance
of Alabama initiated a survey to determine the extent of hate crimes and
acts of hate against local gays and lesbians. Charles Collins, a public
health researcher at the UAB School of Public Health conducted the
survey. Results documented pervasive anti-gay violence, harassment and
discrimination in the Birmingham area.
44% of respondents report having been the target of anti-gay physical
abuse, discrimination and/or harassment in their family of origin.
49% report having been the target of anti-gay hate acts at school.
National studies show that a very high percentage of gay teens attempt
suicide and that suicides by gay teens make up 30% to 40% of all teen
suicides.
48% or respondents report anti-gay violence, harassment or
discrimination in the workplace, including 15% who were fired.
39% report hate acts such as vandalism, threats or assault in their
neighborhoods and communities.
Blacks and women report roughly the same level of violence, harassment
and discrimination as whites and men, except that boys are three times
more likely to be targeted by homophobia in schools.
31% report having been targeted by anti-gay physical abuse in two
different settings of their lives: family of origin, school, the
community or the workplace. National surveys indicate that one third of
anti-gay assaults include use of a weapon.
58% report anti-gay discrimination in more than two settings.
70% report anti-gay harassment, threats and intimidation in more than
two settings.
Conservative estimates indicate a total population of more than 25,000
self-identified gays and lesbians, a number that includes over 2,000
local teens.
35% of survey respondents report most forms of anti-gay hate in most
settings of their lives. This group reports significantly less
confidence that the general community will confront homophobia.
We ask our fellow citizens to consider the individual human implications
of these findings.
NATIONAL STATISTICS
The 2003 National School Climate Survey
From the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network (GLSEN)
84% of
GLBT students reported being verbally harassed (name calling, threats,
etc.) because of their sexual orientation.
82.9%
reported that faculty or staff never intervened or intervened only some
of the time when present when homophobic remarks were made.
39.1%
of GLBT students reported being physically harassed (being shoved,
pushed, etc.) because of their sexual orientation.
44.7%
of GLBT youth of color report being verbally harassed because of both
their sexual orientation and race/ethnicity.
GLBT
students unable to identify supportive teachers or staff were more than
twice as likely not to plan to continue their education after secondary
school.
GPA
for students who cannot identify any supportive faculty or staff was
lower than GLBT students who could identify one or more supportive
school personnel (2.8 versus 3.1).
GLSEN STATS
Over 90% of LGBT youth report that they
sometimes or frequently hear homophobic remarks in their school (words
such as "faggot", "dyke", or "queer").
36% of lesbian gay and
bisexual youth report hearing homophobic remarks from faculty or school
staff.
20% of secondary school
counselors report that counseling a homosexual student concerning gay
issues would not be personally gratifying, and do not consider
themselves competent in counseling gay adolescents.
LGBT youth are almost
twice as likely as their non-gay peers to be threatened with or injured
by a weapon at school.
LGBT youth are more than
four times as likely to skip whole days of school out of fear.
Harassed youth are more than four times
as likely to report having made a serious enough suicide attempt to have
been treated by a doctor or nurse.
Contributed by Gay, Lesbian, and
Straight Education Network (GLSEN)
Suicide is the third leading cause of adolescent
mortality in the United States, accounting for 13 percent of deaths
between ages 15 and 24. In 1996, more teenagers and young adults died of
suicide than from cancer, heart disease, AIDS, birth defects, stroke,
pneumonia and influenza, and chronic lung disease combined.
According to Fleischer and Fillman (1995), a 1989
Department of Health Report on youth suicide found that gay and lesbian
youth are up to five times more likely to attempt suicide. The increased
risk among these youth is due to isolation, rejection, confusion, and
shame due to the stigmatization of homosexuality, which results in
depression, suicide, and low self-esteem.
According to an article in the Journal of Adolescent
Research, lesbian, and gay adolescents who attempt suicide share the
following characteristics and experiences:
-
Disclosed their identity to a greater extent, and by
doing so, lost more friends and experienced more victimization
-
Lower self-esteem
-
Acknowledged more mental health problems
-
Early awareness
-
Peer rejection
-
Victimization.
Other major risk factors for LGBT youth:
PFLAG STATS
SUICIDE &
DEPRESSION
-
Suicide is the leading
cause of death among gay and lesbian youth. (1)
-
Gay and lesbian youth
are 2 to 6 times more likely to attempt suicide than heterosexual
youth. (1)
-
Over 30% of all
reported teen suicides each year are committed by gay and lesbian
youth. (1)
REJECTION
-
50% of all gay and
lesbian youth report that their parents reject them due to their
sexual orientation. (2)
-
26% of gay and lesbian
youth are forced to leave home because of conflicts over their
sexual orientation. (1)
-
In a study of 194 gay
and lesbian youth, 25% were verbally abused by parents, and nearly
10% dealt with threatened or actual violence. (12)
HOMELESSNESS
-
Approximately 40% of
homeless youth are identified as gay, lesbian or bisexual. (3)
-
Service providers
estimate that gay, lesbian and bisexual youth make up 20-40% of
homeless youth in urban areas. (18)
-
In a study of male
teenagers self-described as gay or bisexual, 27% moved away from
home because of conflict with family members over sexual
orientation. Almost half had run away from home at least once. (2)
SUBSTANCE ABUSE
-
Gays and lesbians are
at much higher risk than the heterosexual population for alcohol and
drug abuse. (1)
-
Approximately 30% of
both the lesbian and gay male populations have problems with
alcohol. (1)
-
Substantially higher
proportions of homosexual people use alcohol, marijuana or cocaine
than is the case in the general population. (6)
-
55% of gay men have
had a substance abuse problem sometime in their life. (10)
HIGH DROP OUT
RATES
-
Approximately 28% of
gay and lesbian youth drop out of high school because of discomfort
(due to verbal and physical abuse) in the school environment. (2)
-
Gay and lesbian
youth’s discomfort stems from fear of name calling and physical
harm. (4)
-
Gay and lesbian youth
are at greater risk for school failure than heterosexual children.
Academic failure, lack of student involvement and low commitment to
school are profound for gay and lesbian youth because schools are
neither safe, healthy nor productive places for them to learn. (1)
VERBAL &
PHYSICAL ASSAULTS
-
Teenage students (gay
AND straight) say the worst harassment in school is being called
‘gay’. (11)
-
In a national survey,
youth (gay AND straight) described being called “lesbian” or “gay”
as the most deeply upsetting form of sexual harassment they
experienced. (14)
-
Gay students hear
anti-gay slurs as often as 26 times each day; faculty intervention
occurs in only about 3% of those cases. (9)
-
In Seattle, 34% of
students who described themselves as gay, lesbian or bisexual
reported being the target of anti-gay harassment or violence at
school or on the way to or from school, compared to 6% of
heterosexual students. (16)
-
Gay and lesbian youth
live, work and attempt to learn in constant fear of physical harm at
school. (4)
-
27% of gay and lesbian
youth have been physically hurt by another student. (12)
-
In 53 schools in
Washington State, 77 incidents of anti-gay harassment and violence
have been reported in the past 3 years, with 34 of these incidents
(44%) serious enough to warrant possible criminal allegations. (15)
LACK OF SUPPORT
-
Few administrators
discipline students for name-calling and harassment of gay and
lesbian students. (5)
-
Teachers may wish to
stop harassment and anti-gay comments, but few have had any specific
training which would teach them to intervene effectively and many
fear reprisals without the explicit support and backing of their
administration. (5)
-
In Michigan, 28% of
school personnel surveyed determined their school environment to be
emotionally unsafe for gay and lesbian youth. (17)
-
Over 50% of national
youth servicing organizations report that they do not have services
or resources in place to educate youth on sexual orientation or to
support gay and lesbian youth. (13)
LACK OF ROLE
MODELS
-
There are very few
openly gay staff members or teachers in schools. (5)
-
The presence of openly
gay and/or lesbian staff members is a crucial component of any
school program seeking to reduce bigotry and provide support for gay
and lesbian students. (5)
VICTIMS OF CRIME
-
Gays and lesbians are
the most frequent victims of hate crimes. (7)
-
Gays and lesbians are
at least 7 times more likely to be crime victims than heterosexual
people. (7)
-
At least 75% of crimes
against gays and lesbians are not reported to anyone. (8)
-
In a study of 5
metropolitan areas (including Boston, Chicago, Minneapolis/St. Paul,
New York City, and San Francisco), there were 1,833 [reported)
incidents of anti-gay and anti-lesbian crimes, which was a 31%
increase over the previous year. (8)
WHY SHOULD THIS
ISSUE BE TALKED ABOUT IN SCHOOLS?
-
In a typical class of
30 students, 8 students (27% of the class) will be directly affected
by homosexuality of self, one or more siblings, or one or both
parents. (10)
Compiled by
PFLAG Phoenix
RESOURCES
1. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, “Report of the
Secretary's Task Force on Youth Suicide: Gay Male and Lesbian Youth
Suicide.” (1989)
2. Remafedi, Gary. (1987). "Male
Homosexuality: The Adolescent's Perspective." Pediatrics, Issue
79. pp. 326-337.
3. Seattle Commission on Children and Youth.
(1986). "Survey of Street Youth." Seattle, WA: Orion Center.
4. Eversole, T. "Addressing Specific Risk
Factors Among Lesbians and Gays.' Counseling Gay, Lesbian and
Bisexual Youth Training Manual. Washington, DC: American
Psychological Association.
5. Governor's Commission on Gay and Lesbian
Youth. (1993). "Making Schools Safe for Gay and Lesbian Youth:
Breaking the Silence in Schools and in Families." Education
Report. Boston, MA.
6. McKirnan, D. J. & Peterson, P. L. (1989).
'Alcohol and Drug Use Among Homosexual Men and Women: Epidemiology
and Population Characteristics." Addictive Behaviors, 14 (5).
pp. 545-553.
7. SIECUS Fact Sheet on Comprehensive
Sexuality Education. (February/March 1993). "Sexual Orientation and
Identity.” SIECUS Report.
8. National Gay and Lesbian Task Force Policy
Institute Report. (1991). Washington, DC.
9. Massachusetts Department of Education
Survey, 1997
10. “Breaking the Silence for Lesbian, Gay and
Bisexual Youth.” (1996) New Hartford, NY.
11. Harris/Scholastic Research, ‘Hostile
Hallways: AAUW Survey of Sexual Harassment in America’s Schools”
(1993)
12. Anthony D'Augelli, unpublished study,
1997. Studied 194 lesbian, gay and bisexual youth aged 14 to 21
attending social and support groups in fourteen metropolitan areas.
13. Advocates for Youth. Survey and Needs
Assessment of Youth Serving Organizations Capacity for Working with
Sexual Minority Youth, March 1995.
14. American Association of University Women,
1993. A total of 1,632 field surveys were completed by public
school students grades 8- 11, in 79 schools across the U.S.
15. Safe Schools Anti-Violence Documentation
Project, Washington State. Third Annual Report, 1996.
16. The 1995 Seattle Teen Health Risk
Survey. Over 8,400 Seattle high school students completed the
survey.
17. 1997 survey of 300 superintendents,
school counselors and psychologists in public and private schools in
five Michigan counties, conducted by the Gay, Lesbian, Straight
Teacher's Network.
18. The National Network of Runaway and Youth
Services. To Whom Do They Belong?: Runaway, Homeless and Other
Youth in High-Risk Situations in the 1990's. Washington, DC.
The National Network, 1991.
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