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Journal Article

Citation

Ferguson CJ, Miller-Stratton H, Heinrich E, Fritz S, Smith S. Int. J. Law Psychiatry 2008; 31(1): 41-50.

Affiliation

Texas A and M International University, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2008, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.ijlp.2007.11.007

PMID

18158184

Abstract

Previous research has indicated that potential jurors are likely to use personal biases, such as those based on gender and ethnicity, in their judgments of culpability of criminal defendants in addition to, or instead of, the facts of the crime. The present paper seeks to extend this literature to the crime of filicide; to examine whether male defendants are judged more harshly than female defendants, as is the case for domestic violence and sexual abuse. 214 participants were provided with a scenario of filicide in which the gender of the perpetrator, the gender of the child, and the family's social class were randomly assigned. Participants were asked to rate the culpability of the defendant in the case. Results indicated that, unlike for other violent crimes, participants did not use gender or social class biases in their judgments of criminal culpability.


Language: en

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