Using social norms to reduce men's rape proclivity: Perceived rape myth acceptance of out-groups may be more influential than that of in-groups

Bohner G, Pina A, Viki GT, Siebler F (2010)
Psychology, Crime and Law 16(8): 671-693.

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | Englisch
 
Download
Es wurden keine Dateien hochgeladen. Nur Publikationsnachweis!
Autor*in
Bohner, GerdUniBi ; Pina, Afroditi; Viki, G. Tendayi; Siebler, Frank
Abstract / Bemerkung
Feedback about a reference group's rape myth acceptance (RMA) has been shown to affect men's rape proclivity (Bohner, Siebler, & Schmelcher, Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 32, 286-297, 2006). In two experiments with male university students (total N = 294), this research was extended by varying the in-group vs out-group status of the reference group. Results showed that feedback about other men's RMA influenced self-reported RMA (Experiment 1) and rape proclivity (Experiments 1 and 2). Overall, participants' rape proclivity was affected by feedback about both in-groups' RMA and out-groups' RMA. The strongest reduction of rape proclivity was produced by low-RMA feedback about an out-group that participants expected to be high in RMA (Experiment 2). Implications for theory and intervention are discussed.
Stichworte
rape myths; rape proclivity; sexual aggression; sexual violence; social norms
Erscheinungsjahr
2010
Zeitschriftentitel
Psychology, Crime and Law
Band
16
Ausgabe
8
Seite(n)
671-693
ISSN
1068-316X
eISSN
1477-2744
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/1900649

Zitieren

Bohner G, Pina A, Viki GT, Siebler F. Using social norms to reduce men's rape proclivity: Perceived rape myth acceptance of out-groups may be more influential than that of in-groups. Psychology, Crime and Law. 2010;16(8):671-693.
Bohner, G., Pina, A., Viki, G. T., & Siebler, F. (2010). Using social norms to reduce men's rape proclivity: Perceived rape myth acceptance of out-groups may be more influential than that of in-groups. Psychology, Crime and Law, 16(8), 671-693. https://doi.org/10.1080/1068316X.2010.492349
Bohner, Gerd, Pina, Afroditi, Viki, G. Tendayi, and Siebler, Frank. 2010. “Using social norms to reduce men's rape proclivity: Perceived rape myth acceptance of out-groups may be more influential than that of in-groups”. Psychology, Crime and Law 16 (8): 671-693.
Bohner, G., Pina, A., Viki, G. T., and Siebler, F. (2010). Using social norms to reduce men's rape proclivity: Perceived rape myth acceptance of out-groups may be more influential than that of in-groups. Psychology, Crime and Law 16, 671-693.
Bohner, G., et al., 2010. Using social norms to reduce men's rape proclivity: Perceived rape myth acceptance of out-groups may be more influential than that of in-groups. Psychology, Crime and Law, 16(8), p 671-693.
G. Bohner, et al., “Using social norms to reduce men's rape proclivity: Perceived rape myth acceptance of out-groups may be more influential than that of in-groups”, Psychology, Crime and Law, vol. 16, 2010, pp. 671-693.
Bohner, G., Pina, A., Viki, G.T., Siebler, F.: Using social norms to reduce men's rape proclivity: Perceived rape myth acceptance of out-groups may be more influential than that of in-groups. Psychology, Crime and Law. 16, 671-693 (2010).
Bohner, Gerd, Pina, Afroditi, Viki, G. Tendayi, and Siebler, Frank. “Using social norms to reduce men's rape proclivity: Perceived rape myth acceptance of out-groups may be more influential than that of in-groups”. Psychology, Crime and Law 16.8 (2010): 671-693.
Export

Markieren/ Markierung löschen
Markierte Publikationen

Open Data PUB

Web of Science

Dieser Datensatz im Web of Science®
Suchen in

Google Scholar