Salvation or damnation?: Religion and correctional ideology

被引:9
|
作者
T. David Evans
Mike Adams
机构
[1] University of North Carolina at Wilmington,Department of Sociology and Criminal Justice
关键词
Religious Belief; Death Penalty; Young Offender; Harsh Punishment; Attribution Style;
D O I
10.1007/BF02885750
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Fundamentalist affiliation and religious beliefs are generally related to more punitive attitudes toward criminals. Fundamentalists also tend to attribute criminality to individual dispositional factors, and in turn, such factors are related to punitiveness. Recently, it has also been found that compassionate dimensions of religion are related to treatment-oriented policies. It is still not clear which dimensions of religion are related to punitive or treatment ideology and what effects religious variables may have when tested against secular concerns about crime and crime attributions. In the present research, we test three models of punitiveness and one model of rehabilitation with demographic, secular, religious, and attributional factors. We found that those for whom religion is salient in their daily lives tend to believe that the death penalty should be reserved for older offenders and that those who believe in a punitive God tend to support harsher punishments.
引用
收藏
页码:15 / 35
页数:20
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