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Journal Article

Citation

Angelone DJ, Mitchell D, Lucente L. J. Interpers. Violence 2012; 27(13): 2582-2602.

Affiliation

Rowan University, Glassboro, NJ, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0886260512436385

PMID

22328651

Abstract

The purpose of the current study is to examine the influence of multiple offender motivations (including no indication of a motivation), relationship length, and gender role beliefs on perceptions of a male-on-female date rape. A sample of 348 U.S. college students read a brief vignette depicting a date rape and completed a questionnaire regarding their attributions about the victim (culpability, credibility, trauma, pleasure) and perpetrator (culpability, guilt, sentencing recommendations). Results indicate that providing observers with information about the perpetrator's motivation was associated with lower victim blame. Relationship length is not predictive of rape attributions. Egalitarian gender role attitudes are associated with lower levels of victim blame. Overall, gender role attitudes exert a more significant influence on rape attributions than participant gender. The findings suggest that knowledge of an offender's motivation as well as observers' gender role attitudes can influence attributions about the culpability of victims and perpetrators of date rape.


Language: en

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