Sam Houston State University, Huntsville, TX, USA.
J Interpers Violence. 2012 Sep;27(13):2527-44. doi: 10.1177/0886260512436388. Epub 2012 Feb 10.
Intimate partner violence (IPV) constitutes the majority of assaults against women in the United States, and greater than one third of female homicide victims are murdered by an intimate partner. In a small percentage of cases, battered women kill their abusers, and evidence of battering and its effects may be used to support a plea of self-defense in these cases. Prior research has shown that culpability attributions toward battered women who have killed their abusers are influenced by perceiver variables, including gender. The present study expands on this research by examining the influence of psychological distress resulting from perceivers' own IPV experiences--and the mechanisms of this influence--on their culpability attributions toward a battered woman defendant. Female undergraduates in the present sample (N = 154) read a vignette, adapted from an actual criminal case about a battered woman who had killed her abuser. Data supported a hypothesized path model, wherein participants reporting greater psychological distress resulting from IPV perpetrated against them perceived themselves more similar to the defendant, in turn empathized with her to a greater extent, and, in turn, attributed less legal culpability to her. Implications for future research are discussed.
亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)构成了美国大多数针对女性的攻击,超过三分之一的女性凶杀案受害者是被亲密伴侣杀害的。在极少数情况下,受虐妇女会杀死她们的施虐者,在这些情况下,施虐行为及其影响的证据可用于支持自卫辩护。先前的研究表明,对施虐者杀害施虐者的受虐妇女的罪责归因受到知觉变量的影响,包括性别。本研究通过考察感知者自身 IPV 经历所导致的心理困扰及其对受虐妇女被告罪责归因的影响机制,对这一研究进行了扩展。本研究中的女性本科生(N=154)阅读了一个案例,改编自一个关于受虐妇女杀死施虐者的实际刑事案件。数据支持一个假设的路径模型,即报告因 IPV 而遭受更大心理困扰的参与者认为自己与被告更相似,进而对她更有同理心,进而认为她的法律罪责更小。讨论了对未来研究的影响。