This article reports experiments assessing how general threats to social order and severity of a crime can influence punitiveness. Results consistently showed that when participants feel that the social order is threatened, they behave more punitively toward a crime perpetrator, but only when severity associated with a crime was relatively moderate. Evidence is presented to suggest that people can correct—at least to a degree—for the “biasing ” influ-ence of these inductions. Finally, threats to social order appear to increase punitiveness by arousing a retributive desire to see indi-viduals pay for what they have done, as opposed to a purely utili-tarian desire to deter future wrongdoing. The authors suggest that individuals sometimes act ...
In the recent controversy concerning therelationship between social class and criminality, thedistin...
This study aimed to replicate the intuitive retributivism hypothesis, according to which people s pu...
Recent trends in crime control have given new energy to an age-old question, namely what kinds of ac...
Abstract: Motivations to punish should depend on a number of factors including the nature of the int...
Objectives: Both scholars and legal practitioners have long theorized that a central function of cri...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis Group in Social Influence...
Across societies, humans punish norm violations. To date, research on the antecedents and consequenc...
This paper develops a theoretical framework for investigating the socialpsychological dynamics of pu...
Recent developments in brain science confirm that as a race we are in fact a punitive lot. Human bei...
One of the many founding concepts of contemporary social science that arose during the Enlightenment...
Punishment is the act of penalizing an individual as a response to a transgression. This thesis will...
Why do people support tough sentencing of criminal offenders? Three explanations dominate the litera...
open2noWe study the effect of social influence on agentsâ decisions to engage in costly decentralize...
This study examines the role-related conditions which generate a tar-get's compliance with a so...
Peer punishment is widely considered a key mechanism supporting cooperation in human groups. Althoug...
In the recent controversy concerning therelationship between social class and criminality, thedistin...
This study aimed to replicate the intuitive retributivism hypothesis, according to which people s pu...
Recent trends in crime control have given new energy to an age-old question, namely what kinds of ac...
Abstract: Motivations to punish should depend on a number of factors including the nature of the int...
Objectives: Both scholars and legal practitioners have long theorized that a central function of cri...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis Group in Social Influence...
Across societies, humans punish norm violations. To date, research on the antecedents and consequenc...
This paper develops a theoretical framework for investigating the socialpsychological dynamics of pu...
Recent developments in brain science confirm that as a race we are in fact a punitive lot. Human bei...
One of the many founding concepts of contemporary social science that arose during the Enlightenment...
Punishment is the act of penalizing an individual as a response to a transgression. This thesis will...
Why do people support tough sentencing of criminal offenders? Three explanations dominate the litera...
open2noWe study the effect of social influence on agentsâ decisions to engage in costly decentralize...
This study examines the role-related conditions which generate a tar-get's compliance with a so...
Peer punishment is widely considered a key mechanism supporting cooperation in human groups. Althoug...
In the recent controversy concerning therelationship between social class and criminality, thedistin...
This study aimed to replicate the intuitive retributivism hypothesis, according to which people s pu...
Recent trends in crime control have given new energy to an age-old question, namely what kinds of ac...