427 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
427 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
Newsgroups: soc.bi,soc.motss
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From: alan@ninja.osf.org (Alan Hamilton)
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Subject: Sexual and Gender Identity Glossary (long)
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Message-ID: <1992Dec19.234456.3748@osf.org>
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Organization: Open Software Foundation
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Date: Sat, 19 Dec 1992 23:44:56 GMT
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Lines: 418
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[Sent to soc.bi, soc.motss, BiAct-L, Bisexu-l, BiFem-l.]
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If you are interested, I would appreciate folks reviewing the
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following and sending me feedback to improve it before I publish it.
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Since I am no longer able to keep up with all these lists and
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newsgroups, anything you want to ensure that _I_ read should be sent
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to alan@osf.org.
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Thanks for your help.
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-Alan
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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Sexual Identity and Gender Identity Glossary
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This pamphlet is designed to give heterosexuals and people who are
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just starting to think of coming out some basic common terms with the
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gender and sexual identity communities, so that they can speak
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somewhat intelligently with members of these communities without
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seriously offending people or appearing totally clueless. Keep in
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mind that:
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The definitions of these words are not standardized throughout
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society, and are used differently by different individuals and in
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different regions. In particular, these definitions assume the
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existence of two and only two each of _sexes_, _genders_, and
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_sex/gender roles_, which are separate and distinct from one another;
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but many people see them as overlapping, closely related, or as a
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limited view or model of a much richer reality.
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The meanings of words change over time. Changes in thinking and
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attitudes toward sexual and gender identity are taking place in
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society as a whole and within the sexual and gender identity
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communities. The meanings of these words will continue to change.
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For instance, some words are listed For example, there is a slow but
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clear movement in society away from thinking of most human behaviors
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as appropriate to one sex and not appropriate to another, toward
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thinking of most human behaviors as appropriate to both sexes and both
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genders.
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Definitions in (this early version of) this pamphlet were gathered by
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a bisexual-identified white male from the Midwest and Northeast of the
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US. In other parts of the world and other communities than those he
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is familiar with, the same terms may mean different things, and other
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terms may be used for the same and other important meanings.
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Despite these caveats, many people find the terms listed here useful
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in varying degrees for describing their experience, if only as a
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starting point for describing how their view of the world differs from
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that represented here.
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Corrections and additions to these words and definitions (from the US
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and elsewhere) are welcome. Please send them to the ECBN address at
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the end of this pamphlet.
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_Sexual Identity_ and _Gender Identity_ are similar in some ways and
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very different in others. Both refer to how one thinks of a person.
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The existence and perpetuation of gender and sexual identities is
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based in the historic and continuing oppression (systematic
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mistreatment condoned by society as a whole) of people do not conform
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to certain aspects of society's gender roles. Gender roles refer to
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the clothing, behaviors, thoughts, feelings, relationships, etc., that
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are considered appropriate or inappropriate for members of each sex.
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However, _sex_, _gender identity_, and _sexual identity_ refer to
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different aspects of oneself. Therefore, one may be any combination
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of sex (male/female), gender (masculine/feminine), and sexual identity
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(straight, bisexual, lesbian/gay.) In recent history, people
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oppressed on the basis of different sexual identities (_bisexuals_,
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_lesbians_, _gay men_) and people oppressed on the basis of gender
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identity have formed communities which are partly separate and partly
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overlapping with one another. Because of this historic separation,
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someone who is a member of one of these communities does not
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necessarily understand and prioritize the issues of others of these
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communities. One who belongs to more than one of these communities
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may feel welcome in both, but usually neither addresses all one's
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needs or the way that one's needs from different communities overlap
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or interact.
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_Gender identity_ refers to how one thinks of one's own gender:
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whether one thinks of oneself as a man (masculine) or as a woman
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(feminine.) Society prescribes arbitrary rules or _gender roles_ (how
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one is supposed to and not supposed to dress, act, think, feel, relate
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to others, think of oneself, etc.) based on one's _sex_ (whether one
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has a vagina or a penis.) These gender roles are called _feminine_
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and _masculine_. Anyone who does not abide by these arbitrary rules
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may be targeted for mistreatment ranging from not being included in
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people's circle of friends, through the cold shoulder, snide comments,
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verbal harrassment, assault, rape, and murder based on one's
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(perceived) gender identity.
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_Sexual identity_ refers to how one thinks of oneself in terms of whom
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one is sexually and romantically attracted to, specifically whether
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one is attracted to members of the same gender as one's own or the
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other gender than one's own. Society prescribes arbitrary rules that
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one should be sexually and romantically attracted to members of the
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other gender than one's own, and should not be attracted to members of
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the same gender as one's own. Anyone who does not abide by these
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arbitrary rules may be targeted for mistreatment ranging from not
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being included in people's circle of friends, through the cold
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shoulder, snide comments, verbal harrassment, assault, rape, and
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murder based on one's (perceived) sexual identity. (See _homophobia_
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and _biphobia_.) When one's sex and one's gender identity are
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different, one may base one's sexual identity on either one.
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Alternatively, one may have two sexual identities, one as a man and
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one as a woman.
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These are terms often used within the sexual identity and gender
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identity communities. Self-identification terms are often spelled
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with initial caps (e.g. Queer, Bisexual) to emphasize that they refer
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to how one think of oneself, rather than how someone else labels one.
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(For instance, researchers often classify bisexual-identified women
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and men as lesbians and gay men and transvestites as transsexuals,
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obscuring important distinctions.)
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Androgenous/Androgeny: 1. One who is / the quality of simultaneously
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exhibiting _masculine_ and _feminine_ characteristics. 2.
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Bigendered: One who switches between masculine and feminine gender
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roles from time to time.
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Biphobia: The oppression or mistreatment of Bisexuals, especially by
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lesbians and gay men. (See _homophobia_.)
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Bisexual: One who has significant sexual and romantic attractions to
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members of both the same and the other sex, or who identify as members
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of the bisexual community. Derogatory terms include the same terms as
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are applied to lesbians and gay men. Derogatory terms from lesbians,
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gay men, and some heterosexuals: fence sitter, AC/DC, double-gaited,
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confused.
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Boy: 1. A young male. 2. Colloquial term for _masculine_. Often used
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to specify gender of clothes. ["My _boy_ clothes."] _Boy_ has often
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been used as a condescending term for a man (especially a man of
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color), and is therefore distasteful to many people. (See _girl_.)
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Butch: 1. Masculine or macho dress and behavior, regardless of _sex_
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or _gender identity_. 2. A sub-identity of lesbian or gay, based on
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masculine or macho dress and behavior. (See _femme_.)
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Camp: To joke or playact exaggerated masculine or feminine behaviors
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for others' entertainment. Especially men exhibiting exaggerated
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feminine behaviors. Also _to camp it up_.
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Come out: 1. To disclose one's own sexual identity to another. [I
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came out to my mother over Thanksgiving vacation.] 2. To discover
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that one's own sexual identity is different than previously assumed.
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[I came out to myself three months ago.] 3. To deal with one's own
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and others' reactions to the discovery or revelation of one's sexual
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identity. 4. (_- for_) To disclose another's sexual identity with
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their permission or at their request. [I asked my mother to _come
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out_ to my grandparents for me.] (See _out_.) 4. Sometimes applied
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to disclosure of other information than one's sexual identity.
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Cross Dresser (CD): One (regardless of the motivation) who wears
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clothes, makeup, etc. which are considered (by the culture)
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appropriate for the other sex but not one's own.
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Drag (In Drag): 1. Clothes, often unusual or dramatic, especially
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those considered appropriate to the other sex. 2. Can be applied to
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any recognizable "look." [_(to a man in a suite)_: I see you are in
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corporate _drag_ today.] 3. _In drag_: Wearing clothes of the
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opposite sex. [I went to the halloween party _in drag_.]
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Drag Queen: A M->F transvestite who employs dramatic clothes, makeup,
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and mannerisms, often for other people's appreciation.
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Dyke: Reclaimed derogatory slang. Refers to Lesbians, or to Lesbians
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and Bisexual women.
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Electrolysis: Process of killing hair follicles, especially of facial
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and neck hair, usually with an electric needle.
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F->M: Female to male. Used to specify the direction of a sex or
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gender role change.
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Femme: 1. Feminine or effeminate dress and behavior, regardless of
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_sex_ or _gender identity_. 2. A sub-identity of lesbian or gay,
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based on masculine or macho dress and behavior. (See _butch_.)
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Female: One who has a vagina.
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Female Impersonator (FI): A male who, on specific occasions, cross
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dresses and employs stereotypical feminine dialog, voice, and
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mannerisms for the entertainment of other people.
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Feminine: The _gender role_ assigned to _females_.
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Fetishistic Transvestite: A Transvestite who consistently eroticizes
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Cross Dressing. May also eroticize fantasies of gender/sex change.
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Gay (man/male) (community): One who has significant sexual and
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romantic attractions primarily to members of the same sex (as
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oneself), or who identifies as a member of the gay community.
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Sometimes refers only to gay males, sometimes only to gay males and
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lesbians. Although some people use the term _gay (commmunity)_ to
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refer to all sexual minorities (or the _sexual minority community_),
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Lesbians and Bisexuals often do not feel included by it. Derogatory
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slang includes: queer, faggot, swish.
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Gender (identity): A psychological _gender role_. _Masculine_ or
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_feminine_.
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Gender (identity) community: People who identify as transvestite,
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transsexual, or transgendered, or as members of the gender community.
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Members of the gender community do not necessarily identify as members
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of the sexual minority community. (See _transgender community_.)
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Gender dysphoria (GD): Unhappiness or discomfort experienced by one
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whose sexual organs do not match one's gender identity.
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Gender neutral: Clothing, behaviors, thoughts, feelings,
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relationships, etc. which are considered appropriate for members of
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both sexes.
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Gender role: Arbitrary rules, assigned by society, that define what
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clothing, behaviors, thoughts, feelings, relationships, etc. are
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considered appropriate and inappropriate for members of each sex.
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Some clothing, behaviors, etc. are considered appropriate for members
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of both sexes. Which things are considered masculine, feminine, or
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neutral varies according to location, class, occasion, and numerous
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other factors. (See _masculine_, _feminine_, and _gender neutral_.)
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Genetic Boy (GB): Colloquial term for Genetic Male. (See _boy_.)
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Genetic Male/Man (GM): One who was considered male from birth,
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regardless of one's present sex or gender identity.
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Genetic Female/Woman (GF/GM): One who was born female, regardless of
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one's present sex or gender identity.
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Genetic Girl (GG): Colloquial term for Genetic Female. (See _girl_.)
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Girl: 1. A young female. 2. Colloquial term for _feminine_. Often
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used to specify gender of clothes. ["My _girl_ clothes."] _Girl_ has
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often been used as a condescending term for a woman, and is therefore
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distasteful to many people. (See _boy_.)
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Hermaphrodite: One who has both a penis and a vagina.
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Heterosexual (het): One who has significant sexual and romantic
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attractions primarily to members of the other sex (than oneself.)
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Derogatory terms include: breeder. (See _straight_.)
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Heterosexism: The assumption that identifying as heterosexual and
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having sexual and romantic attractions only to members of the other
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sex (than oneself) is good and acceptable, and that other sexual
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identities and attractions are bad and unacceptable. The assumption
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that anyone is straight whose sexual orientation is not known, usually
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coupled with a "blindness" to the existence and concerns of LesBiGays.
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Homophile (community): Obsolete term for gay male (community.)
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Homophobia: Originally, an irrational fear of sexual attraction to the
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same sex. Developed into a term for the oppression of Lesbians and
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Gay men, and later into a term for all aspects of the oppression of
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Lesbians, Gay men, and Bisexuals (sometimes does not include
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bisexuals.) This oppression ranges from not including LesBiGays in
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one's circle of friends and media reports on and representations of
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society, through the cold shoulder, snide comments, verbal
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harrassment, assault, rape, and murder based on the target person's
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(perceived) sexual identity. (See also _Biphobia_.)
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Homophobe: One who is afraid of or oppresses people because one
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(perceives them to) have sexual and romantic attractions to members of
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the same sex.
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Homosexual: Formal or clinical term for _gay_, usually meaning _gay
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male_, sometimes meaning _LesGay_, and occasionally meaning
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_LesBiGay_. _Homosexual_ and _homosexuality_ are often associated
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with the proposition that same gender attractions are a mental
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disorder (homophilia), and are therefore distasteful to some people.
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Hormone therapy: Used to change secondary sex characteristics,
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including breast size, weight distribution, and facial hair growth.
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(See _electolysis_.)
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Identify/ied (as): To think of oneself as having a particular sexual
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identity or gender identity. [I _identify as_ a bisexual. I am
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bi-_identified_.] To emphaise that an identity term refers to one's
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internal reality, as opposed to what others think or observe of one,
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_self-identify_ is sometimes used.
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Identity: How one thinks of oneself. One's internal self, as opposed
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to what others observe or think about one. (See _Label_.)
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Label: How someone else sees or thinks of one. (See _identity_.)
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Lesbian: A woman who has significant sexual and romantic attractions
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to members of the same sex, or who identifies as a member of the
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lesbian community. Bisexual women often do not feel included by this
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term. Derogatory slang: dyke, lesbo.
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LesBiGay (community): Contraction of "lesbian, bisexual, and gay."
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Colloquial term for the sexual minority community or its members.
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Often spelled with capital "B" and "G" to prevent misinterpretation as
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"lesbian and gay." (See _sexual minority/identity community_.)
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LesGay: Contraction of "lesbian and gay." Sometimes used to mean
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LesBiGay, but bisexual women and men often do not feel included by
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this term.
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M->F: Male to female. Used to specify the direction of a sex or
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gender role change.
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Male: One who has a penis.
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Male Impersonator: A female who, on specific occasions, cross dresses
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and employs stereotypical masculine dialog, voice, and mannerisms for
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the entertainment of other people.
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Masculine: The _gender role_ assigned to _males_.
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Monogendered: One who is comfortable in only one gender role. (Do
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people actually use this, or is it just a syntactic extension of
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_bigendered_?)
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Monosexual: One who has significant sexual and romantic attractions
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primarily to members of one sex. Straight, Gay, Lesbian. Someone who
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is not Bisexual.
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Neuter: 1. One who has neither a penis nor a vagina. 2. Occasionally
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used to mean _androgenous_.
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Other sex/gender: The other sex or gender than the reference person's
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own. [She has an other sex partner (than her own sex).] [Are you
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currently in a relationship with a member of the same sex (as
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yourself)?]
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(to be) Out: To be open about one's sexual identity with someone or in
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a situation. [I am _out_ to my mother.] [I am _out_ at work.] (See
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_come out_.)
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Out [someone]: 1. To disclose a second person's sexual identity to a
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third person, especially without the second person's permission. 2.
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To disclose one's own sexual identity, sometimes without choosing to
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do so. [I outed myself by leaving a political letter on my desk,
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which my boss saw when he was looking for me.] (See _come out_.)
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Pre-operative transsexual (Pre-op TS): One who is actively planning to
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switch physical sexes, mostly to relieve _gender dysphoria_.
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Probably, but not necessarily, _cross dresses_, takes _hormone
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therapy_, and gets _electrolysis_. (See _transsexual._)
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Primary sex organs: Penis (male) or vagina (female.) (See _female_,
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_male_, _hermaphrodite_, _neuter_.)
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Same sex/gender: The same sex or gender as the reference person's own.
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[He has a same sex partner (as his own sex).] [Are you currently in a
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relationship with a member of the same sex (as yourself)?]
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Self-identify/identity as: See _identify as_ and _identity_.
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Sex: _Male_ or _female_, depending on one's _primary sex organs_.
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Sex role: See _gender role_.
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Sexual identity: How one thinks of oneself, in terms of being
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significantly attracted to members of the same or the other sex.
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Based on one's internal experience, as opposed to which gender one's
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actual sexual partners belong to. (See _sexual
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orientation/preference_.)
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Sexual identity/minority community: The community of people who have
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significant sexual and romantic attractions to members of the same
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sex, or who identify as a member of the sexual minority community. A
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formal term which includes LesBiGays and sometimes members of the
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gender community. Members of the _sexual minority community_ usually
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do not identify as members of the _gender community_.
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Sexual orientation/preference: How one thinks of her/himself, in terms
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of being significantly attracted to members the same or the other sex.
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_Sexual orientation_ emphasizes that some people feel that one has no
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control or influence over the development of one's sexual and romantic
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attractions or one's sexual orientation. _Sexual preference_
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emphasizes that some people feel that one does or should have some
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control or influence over the development of one's sexual and romantic
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attractions or sexual one's orientation.
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Sexual Reassignment Surgery (SRS): A surgical procedure which changes
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one's primary sexual organs from one sex to another (penis to vagina
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or vagina to penis.)
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SRS: Colloquial for _Sexual Reassignment Surgery_.
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Straight: Colloquial for _heterosexual_. Because _straight_ has
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connotations of "unadulterated," "pure," and "honest," some members of
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the sexual identity community object to the implication that one who
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is not straight is "bent," "adulterated," "impure," or "dishonest."
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_Straight_ has connotations of "narrow," "straight-laced" or
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"conservative," and some heterosexual-identified people object find it
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distasteful.
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Transgender community: Formal term for _gender community_.
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Transgendered (TG): One who switches gender roles, whether just once,
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or many times at will. Inclusive term for transsexuals and
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transvestites.
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Transsexual (TS): One who switches physical sexes (usually just once,
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but there are exceptions.) Primary sex change is accomplished by
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surgery. (See _SRS_.) _Hormone therapy_, _electrolysis_, additional
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surgery, and other treatments can change secondary sex
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characteristics. (See Pre-op TS.)
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Transvestite (TV): One who mainly cross dresses for pleasure in the
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appearance and sensation. The pleasure may not be directly erotic.
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It may be empowering, rebellious, or something else. May feel
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comfortable in a focused transgender role while cross dressed. May
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occasionally experience gender dysphoria.
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Queer: 1. Reclaimed derogatory slang for the sexual minority community
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(eg. _Queer Nation_.) Not accepted by all the sexual minority
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community, especially older members. 2. Sometimes used for an even
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wider spectrum of marginalized or radicalized groups and individuals.
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