Attitudes Toward Interpersonal Violence Against Women as a Function of Relationship
Attitudes Toward Interpersonal Violence Against Women as a Function of Relationship
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Date
2015-12-02
Authors
Musgrove, Olivia
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University Honors College, Middle Tennessee State University
Abstract
This study hypothesized that people would be more accepting of violence towards prostitutes
than towards other victims, that women would be less tolerant of violence toward either party
than men, and that women would see both situations as equally unacceptable, but men would
see violence toward prostitutes as more acceptable than violence against an ex-lover.
Participants (114 undergraduate students) were asked to read one of two scenarios involving
violence: one involving a prostitute relationship and the other involving an ex-lover
relationship. The attitudes being measured were analyzed using a 2 (participant gender) x 2
(relationship: prostitute or ex-lover) ANOVA. The results of this study support all three
hypotheses. Women were more pro-victim than men; people were more accepting of
violence toward the prostitute than the ex-lover; and women saw both situations as equally
unacceptable, but men saw violence toward prostitutes as more acceptable than violence
against the ex-lover.
Description
Keywords
attitudes,
assault,
victim blaming,
belief in a just world