When and Why We See Victims as Responsible

Why do victims sometimes receive sympathy for their suffering and at other times scorn and blame? Here we show a powerful role for moral values in attitudes toward victims. We measured moral values associated with unconditionally prohibiting harm (“individualizing values”) versus moral values associated with prohibiting behavior that destabilizes groups and relationships (“binding values”: loyalty, obedience to authority, and purity). Increased endorsement of binding values predicted increased ratings of victims as contaminated (Studies 1-4); increased blame and responsibility attributed to victims, increased perceptions of victims’ (versus perpetrators’) behaviors as contributing to the outcome, and decreased focus on perpetrators (Studies 2-3). Patterns persisted controlling for politics, just world beliefs, and right-wing authoritarianism. Experimentally manipulating linguistic focus off of victims and onto perpetrators reduced victim blame. Both binding values and focus modulated victim blame through victim responsibility attributions. Findings indicate the important role of ideology in attitudes toward victims via effects on responsibility attribution.

[1]  R. Nisbett,et al.  Behavior as seen by the actor and as seen by the observer , 1973 .

[2]  D. Abrams,et al.  Perceptions of stranger and acquaintance rape: the role of benevolent and hostile sexism in victim blame and rape proclivity. , 2003, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[3]  Kurt Gray,et al.  The Unifying Moral Dyad , 2015, Personality & social psychology bulletin.

[4]  David DeSteno,et al.  Moral Hypocrisy , 2007, Psychological science.

[5]  S. Walker,et al.  HISTORY OF THE CRIME VICTIMS ' MOVEMENT IN THE UNITED STATES , 2007 .

[6]  P. Rogers,et al.  Examining the Relationship Between Male Rape Myth Acceptance, Female Rape Myth Acceptance, Victim Blame, Homophobia, Gender Roles, and Ambivalent Sexism , 2012, Journal of interpersonal violence.

[7]  Mark W. Lipsey,et al.  Practical Meta-Analysis , 2000 .

[8]  N. Roese Counterfactual thinking. , 1997, Psychological bulletin.

[9]  Linda L. Carli,et al.  The Effect of Hindsight on Victim Derogation , 1989 .

[10]  Jonathan F. Kominsky,et al.  Causal superseding , 2015, Cognition.

[11]  Michael A. Olson,et al.  Implicit measures in social cognition. research: their meaning and use. , 2003, Annual review of psychology.

[12]  M. Alicke Culpable control and the psychology of blame. , 2000, Psychological bulletin.

[13]  L. Young,et al.  Caring across Boundaries versus Keeping Boundaries Intact: Links between Moral Values and Interpersonal Orientations , 2013, PloS one.

[14]  B. Krahé,et al.  Blaming the Victim and Exonerating the Perpetrator in Cases of Rape and Robbery: Is There a Double Standard? , 2011, Journal of interpersonal violence.

[15]  R. Kurzban,et al.  Evolutionary origins of stigmatization: the functions of social exclusion. , 2001, Psychological bulletin.

[16]  Bertram F. Malle,et al.  A Theory of Blame , 2014 .

[17]  Brian A. Nosek,et al.  A unified theory of implicit attitudes, stereotypes, self-esteem, and self-concept. , 2002, Psychological review.

[18]  L. Young,et al.  Justice and the Moral Lexicon , 2016 .

[19]  L. Young,et al.  Blaming the Victim in the Case of Rape , 2014 .

[20]  Geoffrey W. Sutton,et al.  The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined , 2012 .

[21]  M. Feldner,et al.  Examination of Increased Mental Contamination as a Potential Mechanism in the Association Between Disgust Sensitivity and Sexual Assault-Related Posttraumatic Stress , 2013, Cognitive Therapy and Research.

[22]  B. Malle,et al.  Social dominance orientation: A personality variable predicting social and political attitudes. , 1994 .

[23]  P. Tetlock,et al.  Political diversity will improve social psychological science. , 2014, The Behavioral and brain sciences.

[24]  Joshua K. Hartshorne,et al.  Implicit measurement of motivated causal attribution , 2016, CogSci.

[25]  M. Alicke Culpable Causation , 2004 .

[26]  The uncensored truth about morality , 2015 .

[27]  N. Haslam Concept Creep: Psychology's Expanding Concepts of Harm and Pathology , 2016 .

[28]  F. Cushman Crime and punishment: Distinguishing the roles of causal and intentional analyses in moral judgment , 2008, Cognition.

[29]  G. Bohner,et al.  Writing about rape: use of the passive voice and other distancing text features as an expression of perceived responsibility of the victim. , 2001, The British journal of social psychology.

[30]  Brian A. Nosek,et al.  The Implicit Association Test at Age 7: A Methodological and Conceptual Review , 2007 .

[31]  L. Skitka,et al.  When Values and Attributions Collide: Liberals’ and Conservatives’ Values Motivate Attributions for Alleged Misdeeds , 2010, Personality & social psychology bulletin.

[32]  A. Greenwald,et al.  Measuring individual differences in implicit cognition: the implicit association test. , 1998, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[33]  Tobias Gerstenberg,et al.  Causal Conceptions in Social Explanation and Moral Evaluation , 2015, Perspectives on psychological science : a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

[34]  S. Fiske,et al.  Hostile and Benevolent Sexism , 1997 .

[35]  H. Kelley Attribution theory in social psychology , 1967 .

[36]  J. Vandello,et al.  Prevalence of Rape Myths in Headlines and Their Effects on Attitudes Toward Rape , 2008 .

[37]  Brian A. Nosek,et al.  Understanding and using the implicit association test: I. An improved scoring algorithm. , 2003, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[38]  Jonathan Phillips,et al.  The paradox of moral focus , 2011, Cognition.

[39]  Linda J. Skitka,et al.  Allocating scarce resources : a contingency model of distributive justice , 1992 .

[40]  Kurt Gray,et al.  Moral typecasting: divergent perceptions of moral agents and moral patients. , 2009, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[41]  C. Dalbert Belief in a Just World , 2015 .

[42]  M. Lerner,et al.  Observer's reaction to the "innocent victim": compassion or rejection? , 1966, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[43]  L. Montada,et al.  Glaube an eine gerechte Welt als Motiv: Validierungskorrelate zweier Skalen , 1987 .

[44]  E. Goffman Stigma; Notes On The Management Of Spoiled Identity , 1964 .

[45]  Bruce G. Link,et al.  Culture and stigma: adding moral experience to stigma theory. , 2007, Social science & medicine.

[46]  Dale T. Miller,et al.  Just world research and the attribution process: Looking back and ahead. , 1978 .

[47]  B. Altemeyer,et al.  The Other “Authoritarian Personality” , 1998 .

[48]  Nyla R. Branscombe,et al.  Rape and Accident Counterfactuals: Who Might Have Done Otherwise and Would It Have Changed the Outcome?1 , 1996 .

[49]  Vladas Griskevicius,et al.  Microbes, mating, and morality: individual differences in three functional domains of disgust. , 2009, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[50]  Susan T. Fiske,et al.  The Ambivalent Sexism Inventory: Differentiating hostile and benevolent sexism. , 1996 .

[51]  Joshua Knobe,et al.  The Concept of Intentional Action: A Case Study in the Uses of Folk Psychology , 2006 .

[52]  S. Rachman,et al.  Mental pollution: feelings of dirtiness without physical contact. , 2005, Behaviour research and therapy.

[53]  D. Wegner,et al.  To escape blame, don't be a hero—Be a victim , 2011 .

[54]  J. Pryor,et al.  A dual-process model of reactions to perceived stigma. , 2004, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[55]  F. Heider The psychology of interpersonal relations , 1958 .

[56]  Harris Cooper,et al.  Individual Differences and Attitudes Toward Rape: A Meta-Analytic Review , 1997 .

[57]  Paul E. Levy,et al.  The Development and Validation of a New Machiavellianism Scale , 2009 .

[58]  Brian A. Nosek,et al.  Liberals and conservatives rely on different sets of moral foundations. , 2009, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[59]  D. E. Green,et al.  On "The Coddling of the American Mind" , 2015 .

[60]  F. Keil,et al.  Syntax and intentionality: An automatic link between language and theory-of-mind , 2014, Cognition.

[61]  Brian A. Nosek,et al.  Mapping the moral domain. , 2011, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[62]  A T Panter,et al.  Introducing the GASP scale: a new measure of guilt and shame proneness. , 2011, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[63]  Dale T. Miller,et al.  Norm theory: Comparing reality to its alternatives , 1986 .

[64]  Kurt Gray,et al.  Mind Perception Is the Essence of Morality , 2012, Psychological inquiry.