Measuring Attitudes About Hate: Development of the Hate Crime Beliefs Scale

被引:20
作者
Cabeldue, Mollimichelle K. [1 ]
Cramer, Robert J. [2 ]
Kehn, Andre [3 ]
Crosby, James W. [4 ]
Anastasi, Jeffrey S. [4 ]
机构
[1] Fairleigh Dickinson Univ, Forens Psychol, Teaneck, NJ USA
[2] Old Dominion Univ, Community & Environm Hlth Sci, Norfolk, VA USA
[3] Univ North Dakota, Expt Forens Psychol, Grand Forks, ND 58201 USA
[4] Sam Houston State Univ, Psychol, Huntsville, TX 77340 USA
关键词
hate crimes; scale development; prejudice; blame attribution; WING AUTHORITARIANISM; GENDER-DIFFERENCES; BLAME ATTRIBUTION; VICTIM BLAME; PERCEPTIONS; ORIENTATION; MODEL; BIAS; GAY; RESPONSIBILITY;
D O I
10.1177/0886260516636391
中图分类号
DF [法律]; D9 [法律];
学科分类号
0301 ;
摘要
Employing the federal Hate Crimes Prevention Act (HCPA) of 2009 and other such legislation as a backdrop, the present study evaluated the nature of beliefs about hate-crime legislation, offenders, and victims. In addition, it investigated construct validity (i.e., political beliefs and prejudice) and predictive validity (i.e., blame attribution and sentencing recommendations). A total of 403 U.S. adults completed measures of prejudice and an initial pool of 50 items forming the proposed Hate Crime Beliefs Scale (HCBS). Participants were randomly assigned to read one of four hate-crime vignettes, which varied in regard to type of prejudice (racial-, sexual orientation-, transgender-, and religion-based prejudices) and then responded to blame and sentencing questions. Factor analyses of the HCBS resulted in four sub-scales: Negative Views (i.e., higher scores reflect negative views of legislation and minority group protection), Offender Punishment (i.e., higher scores suggest endorsement of greater punishment), Deterrence (i.e., greater scores denote support for hate-crime legislation as a deterrent of more violence), and Victim Harm (i.e., higher scores reflect pro-victim attitudes). Greater pro-legislation and pro-victim beliefs were related to liberal political beliefs and less prejudicial attitudes, with some exceptions. Controlling for a number of demographic, situational, and attitudinal covariates, the Negative Views sub-scale displayed predictive utility, such that more negative views of legislation/minority group protection were associated with elevated victim blame, as well as lower perpetrator blame and sentencing recommendations. Results are discussed in the context of hate-crime research and policy, with additional implications considered for trial strategy, modern prejudice, and blame attribution theory.
引用
收藏
页码:3656 / 3685
页数:30
相关论文
共 50 条
[21]   A Conceptual Framework to Map Responses to Hate Crime, Hate Incidents and Hate Speech: The Case of Australia [J].
Vergani, Matteo ;
Link, Rouven .
SOCIAL POLICY AND SOCIETY, 2023, 22 (03) :441-458
[22]   Biased hate crime perceptions can reveal supremacist sympathies [J].
Leander, N. Pontus ;
Kreienkamp, Jannis ;
Agostini, Maximilian ;
Stroebe, Wolfgang ;
Gordijn, Ernestine H. ;
Krugianski, Arie W. .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2020, 117 (32) :19072-19079
[23]   An Analysis of Hate Crime Victimization Amongst Immigrants [J].
McCann, Wesley S. ;
Boateng, Francis D. .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE, 2022, 47 (05) :795-817
[24]   Is bullying a junior hate crime? - Implications for interventions [J].
Englander, Elizabeth .
AMERICAN BEHAVIORAL SCIENTIST, 2007, 51 (02) :205-212
[25]   PREVENTING HATE CRIME AND HATE SPEECH. A CRIMINOLOGICAL POINT OF VIEW [J].
Botescu, George-Mircea .
DISCOURSE AS A FORM OF MULTICULTURALISM IN LITERATURE AND COMMUNICATION - SOCIOLOGY, POLITICAL SCIENCES AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS, 2015, :30-42
[26]   How does hate hurt more? National evidence for the varying emotional impacts of hate crime [J].
Brunton-Smith, Ian ;
Jolliffe, Darrick ;
Garland, Jon .
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CRIMINOLOGY, 2025,
[27]   'It's not that we hate you': Understanding children's gender attitudes and expectancies about peer relationships [J].
Zosuls, Kristina M. ;
Martin, Carol Lynn ;
Ruble, Diane N. ;
Miller, Cindy F. ;
Gaertner, Bridget M. ;
England, Dawn E. ;
Hill, Alison P. .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2011, 29 (02) :288-304
[28]   Associations Between Dutch LGBT Hate Crime Experience, Well-Being, Trust in the Police and Future Hate Crime Reporting [J].
Feddes, Allard R. ;
Jonas, Kai J. .
SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2020, 51 (03) :171-182
[29]   The Social Production of Hate Crime Statistics: The Differential Construction of Islamophobic Hate Crime by the Media and Law Enforcement [J].
Mills, Jack M. ;
Lantz, Brendan ;
Wenger, Marin R. .
CRIME & DELINQUENCY, 2024,
[30]   Contextualizing Restorative Justice for Hate Crime [J].
Gavrielides, Theo .
JOURNAL OF INTERPERSONAL VIOLENCE, 2012, 27 (18) :3624-3643