College of Social Work, 2629University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, USA.
Department of Social Work, College of Arts and Sciences, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, USA.
J Interpers Violence. 2022 Dec;37(23-24):NP21626-NP21645. doi: 10.1177/08862605211062987. Epub 2021 Dec 27.
This study investigated how racial prejudice influences White college students' perceptions of hate crime. We also examined the moderating effects of the race of the victim of hate crimes and the absence of hate crime laws. Our sample included 581 White students in a predominantly White university located in a state that does not have a hate crime law. The study was set up in a 2 (race of the victim and the perpetrator) × 3 (level of assault) factorial design. Participants rated their perceptions of three scenarios (i.e., non-racially biased simple assault, racially biased simple assault, and racially biased aggravated assault). The dependent variables were perceptions of hate crime and willingness to report. The key independent variable was participants' level of racial prejudice. The moderators included race of the victim in each scenario and whether participants' state of origin has a hate crime law. Results suggest that higher levels of modern racism were associated with lower perceptions of hate crime and lower willingness to report racially biased simple and aggravated hate crime. When the victim was White, participants with higher levels of racial prejudice were more likely to perceive a hate crime and more willing to report it. The opposite was true when the victim was Black. The absence of state hate crime laws and race of victim were significant moderators. Our study suggests that racial prejudice is associated with lower perceptions of hate crime and willingness to report. Furthermore, the moderating effect of the race of victims provides insights on how racial prejudice can lead to a differential perception of hate crime, depending on whether one's racial in-group is targeted. Our findings also highlight the importance of having state-level hate crime laws to mitigate the linkage between modern racism and perceptions of hate crime.
本研究调查了种族偏见如何影响白人大学生对仇恨犯罪的看法。我们还检查了仇恨犯罪受害者的种族和仇恨犯罪法缺失的调节作用。我们的样本包括位于一个没有仇恨犯罪法的州的一所白人为主的大学的 581 名白人学生。该研究采用了 2(受害者和犯罪者的种族)×3(攻击程度)的析因设计。参与者对三种情景(即无种族偏见的简单攻击、种族偏见的简单攻击和种族偏见的严重攻击)的看法进行了评分。因变量是对仇恨犯罪的看法和报告意愿。关键的自变量是参与者的种族偏见程度。调节变量包括每个情景中的受害者种族和参与者原籍州是否有仇恨犯罪法。结果表明,现代种族主义程度越高,对仇恨犯罪的看法越低,对报告种族偏见的简单和严重仇恨犯罪的意愿越低。当受害者是白人时,种族偏见程度较高的参与者更有可能认为是仇恨犯罪,并更愿意报告。当受害者是黑人时则相反。仇恨犯罪法的缺失和受害者的种族是显著的调节变量。我们的研究表明,种族偏见与对仇恨犯罪的看法较低和报告意愿较低有关。此外,受害者种族的调节作用提供了关于种族偏见如何导致对仇恨犯罪的不同看法的见解,具体取决于自己的种族群体是否成为目标。我们的研究结果还强调了在州一级制定仇恨犯罪法的重要性,以减轻现代种族主义与对仇恨犯罪的看法之间的联系。