I looked into the williams institute some time ago. The press release is a very dishonest one as posters have already noted.
The 'four times' sound bite though keeps being used and it gets used here in the UK as well by those who seek to influence decision making. I will post those using it just this year in the UK in a different post.
Here is a quote that keeps appearing on these threads and in media:
”Transgender people are over four times more likely than cisgender people to experience violent victimization, including rape, sexual assault, and aggravated or simple assault”
It was from this press release that has the head line:
'Transgender people over four times more likely than cisgender people to be victims of violent crime.'
williamsinstitute.law.ucla.edu/press/ncvs-trans-press-release/
I have a few issues with this press release. I think it has been used widely and extensively since it was released. I believe this document discusses those crime statistics
escholarship.org/content/qt7c3704zg/qt7c3704zg.pdf?t=qqfomk&v=lg
I looked at the data behind this. It refers to 369 trans people vs 435 061 people who were not trans identified in a study. That is 0.0008 (0.08%) . That is not a population that you could draw many confident conclusions from. And it would be ridiculous to make the comparison.
What adds to the lack of trust you can put into this sound bite statement is when you think about this from the point of view that women around the world who admit they don’t bother to report their sexual assaults and rapes. Because they have no confidence that they will get justice AND not be vilified in the process.
What % of females actively reporting their attacks vs current trend of not bothering to report would decimate that 369 figure?
And that number cannot be accurately depicted in this point either;
Sure this 'maybe'. However, I believe the huge number of women telling us they don’t report.
This article is misrepresenting the reality.
However, this is the statement that keeps appearing.
”Transgender people are over four times more likely than cisgender people to experience violent victimization, including rape, sexual assault, and aggravated or simple assault”
Including! Notice it says ‘including’!
Not ”Trans people are 4 times more likely to experience violent attacks including rape and sexual assault.”
What was NOT included was a handy breakdown of what constituted the crimes against trans people were. What was the bar for a hate crime being committed for instance? Misogyny? Does that fit the definition that holds for transphobic hate crimes?
Based on 369 people, I am not going to delve so far into that national dataset to look for it. I don’t have the will. Maybe if someone wishes to prove their point, they could link to that data with the breakdown of the actual crimes reported for those 369 people.
“One in four transgender women who were victimized thought the incident was a hate crime compared to less than one in ten cisgender women.”
How many females being taught how to accurately assess the motivation against them as to whether it constituted a hate crime, or indeed using the very same frames of reference as trans people do but based on sexism, and then reanswering that same survey would again make that point meaningless? If there is no 'hate crime' for misogyny the comparison is meaningless?
Do the people writing these papers/press releases or using this to support their points understand the significance of what centuries of oppression of females has done on being able to accurately assess the motivation of crimes against our sex?
I am beginning to. The trans lobby groups are informing my learnings. Because of what they classify as ‘transphobic hate crimes’ when I look at what I have experienced as a female… wow! I sure have overlooked a huge amount of what I just waved away as crap from males.
And that the group who are trans could include many of those reporting abuse that includes misgendering and perceived micro-aggressions. Gosh, imagine if women reported all the hateful things said and done to them on a daily basis.
Crimes that cause harm and pain to anyone should be fully investigated and justice served.
But if a claim such as ”Trans people are 4 times more likely to experience violent attacks including rape and sexual assault.” is going to be made by any institution or poster, it needs to be based on some very robust data. And it isn't.