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Role and justice considerations in the attribution of responsibility to a rape victim
Authors:Ronald E Smith  John P Keating  Reid K Hester  Herman E Mitchell
Affiliation:University of Washington USA
Abstract:This study was designed to assess the extent to which social role and “just world” considerations would affect perceptions and attributions of responsibility to a rape victim. The rape victim was either a topless-bottomless dancer, a social worker, or a Catholic nun, and she was either acquainted or unacquainted with her assailant. In the acquainted condition, the dancer was attributed the greatest and the nun the least amount of responsibility, indicating that social role factors can govern the range of attributional judgments which might be made in any given instance. However, unacquainted victims were ascribed more responsibility for the rape than were acquainted victims, a difference which was significant when the victim was the nun. The latter findings are discussed in terms of Lerner's just world hypothesis. Significant sex differences were found in subjects' perceptions of and responses to the rape incident and, contrary to earlier findings, no relationship was found between victim attractiveness and punitiveness toward the wrongdoer.
Keywords:Requests for reprints should be sent to Ronald E. Smith   Department of Psychology NI-25   University of Washington   Seattle   WA 98195.
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