Effects of Sex and Race of Perpetrator and Method of Killing on Outcome Judgments in a Mock Filicide Case |
| |
Authors: | Kerri F. Dunn Gloria Cowan Daniel Downs |
| |
Affiliation: | Claremont McKenna College; California State University, San Bernardino |
| |
Abstract: | The present study examined college student mock jurors' judgments of legal insanity, outcome severity, and death-penalty decisions in a filicide case. The sex and race of perpetrator (Black or White) and method of killing (shooting or smothering) were varied in a between-subjects design. A 3-way interaction was found for outcome severity, supporting Jones & Davis' (1965) attributional principle of stronger dispositional attributions for unexpected behaviors. As predicted, White women were judged more severely when they used a gun compared to when they smothered, whereas White men were judged more severely when they smothered compared to when they used a gun. The most severe judgments were made for Black male perpetrators who used a gun. Results are discussed in terms of sex and racial stereotypes. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|