system that was considered both to produce and
be produced by everyday terrorism (Dobash and
Dobash, 1979). It has since been recognized as
intersected by racism, ethnocentrism, class
privilege, heterosexism and ablism to produce
diverse experiences of violence (Harne and
Radford, 2008; hooks, 2000; Mama, 1996;
Menjı´var and Salcido 2002; Sokoloff and
Dupont, 2005). For many feminist and antiracist
analysts, poverty and material conditions
both produce and are intensified by everyday
terrorism (Fine, 2012; Fine et al., 1998; Hammer,
2002; hooks, 2000; for a quantitative spatial
analysis, see Di Bartolo, 2001), although
as Sokoloff and Dupont (2005) note, class analysis
is often the least developed in intersectional
analyses.