Crime and Delinquency, volume 70, issue 13-14, pages 3532-3557

Examining Sex- and Sexuality-Based Bias in Punitive Attitudes Toward Offenders Convicted of Intimate Partner Crimes: A Vignette Experiment

Nathan E. Kruis 1
Kim S. Ménard 1
Nicholas J. Rowland 1
Rae Griffith 2
2
 
Sam Huston State University, Huntsville, TX, USA
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2024-07-30
scimago Q1
SJR0.937
CiteScore4.3
Impact factor1.8
ISSN00111287, 1552387X
Abstract

This experimental vignette study used nationally representative survey data ( n = 841) to examine the effects of perpetrator sex and sexuality and victim sex on simulated juror punitivity and sentencing recommendations for individuals convicted of aggravated assault and domestic abuse. Results show participants recommended longer sentences and higher fines for male than for female offenders, and for those who victimized women than for those who victimized men, suggesting the effects of jurorbias on punitive attitudes are influenced by offender and victim sex. However, the effects of offender sexuality were insignificant in modeling. Path analysis showed that sex differences found in baseline models were partially explained by stigmatization (i.e., perceptions of dangerousness, fatalism blame, and social distance) hypothetical jurors attached to offenders.

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