The University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, USA.
Arizona State University, Glendale, USA.
J Interpers Violence. 2024 Apr;39(7-8):1496-1518. doi: 10.1177/08862605231207901. Epub 2023 Oct 30.
Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) is a pervasive public health crisis that impacts individuals across the gender spectrum. Traditionally, IPV is conceptualized through a gendered lens, with men as the perpetrators and women as the victims. The current study explored the association between perpetrator/victim sex, prosecutor gender role attitudes, and prosecutorial decision-making in a case of alleged IPV. We hypothesized that prosecutors with more traditional gender role attitudes would be more lenient, and this effect to be exacerbated in cases involving a female perpetrator. Criminal prosecutors across the United States ( = 94) completed the Male Role Norms Inventory-Revised and read case materials describing the alleged IPV between a heterosexual couple (e.g., arrest report, medical records). The victim/perpetrator sex was manipulated to involve either a female- (male victim) or male- (female victim) perpetrated IPV case. Results indicate that gender role attitudes were not associated with prosecutorial decision-making. However, prosecutors perceived the violence as more serious and the perpetrator as more likely to reoffend when the perpetrator was male; further, they attributed more blame to the female victim. An interaction between perpetrator sex and prosecutor gender role attitudes indicates those with more traditional beliefs were more likely to blame the female (rather than male) victim. These data suggest extralegal factors related to the perpetrator (i.e., perpetrator sex), rather than prosecutor individual differences (i.e., gender role attitudes), are associated with prosecutor discretionary decision-making. In tandem with real-world disparities in the prosecution of IPV based on perpetrator sex, the current research stresses the importance of exploring a diversity of factors that account for these observed differences.
亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)是一种普遍存在的公共卫生危机,影响着各个性别群体的个体。传统上,IPV 是通过性别视角来概念化的,男性是施害者,女性是受害者。本研究探讨了施害者/受害者性别、检察官性别角色态度与涉嫌 IPV 案件中的检控决策之间的关系。我们假设,性别角色态度较为传统的检察官会更为宽容,而这种影响在涉及女性施害者的案件中会更为加剧。美国各地的刑事检察官(n=94)完成了男性角色规范量表修订版,并阅读了描述异性恋夫妇之间涉嫌 IPV 的案件材料(例如逮捕报告、医疗记录)。受害者/施害者的性别被操纵为涉及女性(男性受害者)或男性(女性受害者)实施的 IPV 案件。结果表明,性别角色态度与检控决策无关。然而,当施害者为男性时,检察官认为暴力行为更为严重,施害者更有可能再次犯罪;此外,他们更倾向于将责任归咎于女性受害者。施害者性别与检察官性别角色态度之间的相互作用表明,那些持有较为传统信念的检察官更有可能将责任归咎于女性(而非男性)受害者。这些数据表明,与施害者(即施害者性别)相关的非法律因素,而不是检察官的个体差异(即性别角色态度),与检察官的自由裁量决策相关。与基于施害者性别的 IPV 起诉中的现实世界差异相一致,本研究强调了探索解释这些观察到的差异的多样性因素的重要性。