Journal article
The Roles of Dehumanization and Moral Outrage in Retributive Justice
B Bastian, TF Denson, N Haslam
Plos One | Published : 2013
Abstract
When innocents are intentionally harmed, people are motivated to see that offenders get their "just deserts". The severity of the punishment they seek is driven by the perceived magnitude of the harm and moral outrage. The present research extended this model of retributive justice by incorporating the role of offender dehumanization. In three experiments relying on survey methodology in Australia and the United States, participants read about different crimes that varied by type (child molestation, violent, or white collar - Studies 1 and 2) or severity (Study 3). The findings demonstrated that both moral outrage and dehumanization predicted punishment independently of the effects of crime ..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This research was supported by the Australian Research Council's Discovery Projects funding scheme (Brock Bastian: DP110102632; Tom Denson: DP0985182 & DP120102453). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.