Reactions to victims of crime: Sympathy, defensive attribution, and the just world

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Alice Ross Gold
Pamela Landerman
Kathryn Wold Bullock
Cite this article:  Gold, A. R., Landerman, P., & Wold Bullock, K. (1977). Reactions to victims of crime: Sympathy, defensive attribution, and the just world. Social Behavior and Personality: An international journal, 5(2), 295-304.


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Two studies were conducted that explored observers' perceptions of the responsibility of a victim for her involvement in a premeditated crime. Male and female college students listened to tapes of a purported victim describing, a crime (either a rape or a mugging). Severity of crime was manipulated by having some of the crimes described as unsuccessful attempts and others as successful ones. There was a general tendency toward what we have called a sympathetic reaction pattern, that is, for victims to be assigned less responsibility the more severe the crime. This effect was strongest among those individuals who believed they had a low probability of encountering a fate similar to that of the victim. Those individuals who believed they had a high probability of encountering a fate similar to the victim's tended to make defensive attributions.
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© 1977 Scientific Journal Publishers Limited. All Rights Reserved.