Similarity of Legal Attitudes, Defendant Social Class, and Crime Intentionality as Determinants of Legal Decisions
- 1 April 1979
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
- Vol. 5 (2) , 245-248
- https://doi.org/10.1177/014616727900500226
Abstract
In a simulated legal case, lenient and harsh "law-andorder" attitude subjects judged an upper or lower class defendant who espoused a similar, opposite, or unstated attitude on the matter. The crime was described as either a voluntary or involuntary manslaughter. The intentional crime and the dissimilar attitude defendant drew the harshest sentences from all subjects apparently due to differences in attributions made about the defendant among these conditions. There were no subject or defendant attitude main effects, and social class had no effect whatsoever on sentencing decisions made here, though it has been shown to have impact for other crimes. Results expand our knowledge of extraneous courtroom influences and suggest that some of these factors change meaning in the context of different crimes.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Simulated Jury Study: Characteristics of the Defendant and the JurorsThe Journal of Social Psychology, 1973
- Defensive attribution: Effects of severity and relevance on the responsibility assigned for an accident.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1970
- The influence of the character of the criminal and his victim on the decisions of simulated jurorsJournal of Experimental Social Psychology, 1969
- Measurement of Radicalism-ConservatismThe Journal of Social Psychology, 1965
- Some Determinants and Consequences of the Perception of Social Causality1Journal of Personality, 1955