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  3. Terrorists Among Us: Effects of a Suspect's Group Membership, Terrorist Past, and Knowledge on Lay Persons' Interrogation Severity Recommendations
 

Terrorists Among Us: Effects of a Suspect's Group Membership, Terrorist Past, and Knowledge on Lay Persons' Interrogation Severity Recommendations

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.45170
Publisher DOI
10.1024/1421-0185/a000094
Description
Support among US citizens for severe interrogation has been recognized as drawing upon utilitarian as well as on retributive motivation (Carlsmith & Sood, 2009). Two studies were conducted to expand on these findings in a Swiss sample. In Study 1, participants rated the severity of different interrogation techniques, which were scaled to provide an alternative measure of interrogation severity. In Study 2, retributive motivation was manipulated by varying the terrorist past of a male suspect, and utilitarian motivation was manipulated by varying the probability that the suspect could provide valuable information. Additionally, we manipulated the suspect’s group membership. The results of the vignette study suggest that the number and severity of recommended interrogation techniques is mainly influenced by whether the suspect might provide valuable information. Whether the suspect had a terrorist past was an additional influence that, however, was primarily attributable to the suspect’s group membership: If the suspect belonged to the ingroup, participants’ harsher interrogation recommendations were affected by that person’s past, whereas recommendations were not significantly influenced by a terrorist past if the suspect was an outgroup member.
Date of Publication
2013
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
300 Social sciences, sociology & anthropology
Keyword(s)
interrogation
•
retribution
•
utilitarianism
•
group membership
•
black sheep effect
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Fischer, Andreas
Oswald, Margit
Institut für Psychologie, Sozialpsychologie und Rechtspsychologie
Seiler, Stefan
Additional Credits
Institut für Psychologie, Sozialpsychologie und Rechtspsychologie
Series
Swiss journal of psychology
Publisher
Huber
ISSN
1421-0185
Access(Rights)
restricted
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