2019
DOI: 10.1007/s12103-019-09507-2
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The Pragmatic Public? The Impact of Practical Concerns on Support for Punitive and Rehabilitative Prison Policies

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Cited by 12 publications
(10 citation statements)
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References 75 publications
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“…Our pattern of results aligns closely with other research, including studies of sentencing attitudes [18][19][20][21]38], showing that cost prompts can induce people to trade off these so-called sacred values [39]. The present results extend these previous findings by demonstrating that the effect of cost-benefit salience on punishment judgments may be specific to costs and may represent an implicit effect of cognitive availability, as opposed to a calculated response to gaining new insight about the costs of incarceration.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
“…Our pattern of results aligns closely with other research, including studies of sentencing attitudes [18][19][20][21]38], showing that cost prompts can induce people to trade off these so-called sacred values [39]. The present results extend these previous findings by demonstrating that the effect of cost-benefit salience on punishment judgments may be specific to costs and may represent an implicit effect of cognitive availability, as opposed to a calculated response to gaining new insight about the costs of incarceration.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
“…We also predicted that, reflecting instrumental concerns, respondents would be more supportive of policies that were less costly to taxpayers. Consistent with other research showing sensitivity to cost for prison and reentry services (Garland et al, 2013;Johnston & Wozniak, 2021;Vuk et al, 2020), we found that respondents were more supportive of PPE for institutionalized individuals when the cost was lower (although the results were non-significant in the prisoner condition they were still in the expected direction). We interpret this finding as suggesting that, when crime prevention is not a policy goal, direct monetary costs are an important instrumental concern.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
“…What is not clear is whether this pragmatism extends to more compassionate treatment that is not directly aimed at reforming criminal behavior. Often research showing endorsement of progressive approaches frames it in terms of helping those individuals refrain from crime (e.g., rehabilitation) (Thielo et al, 2016;Vuk et al, 2020). Support for health-related priorities, if not viewed as directly impacting criminal behavior, may be lower on the list.…”
Section: Public Attitudes About Compassionate Criminal Justice Policiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…But punishing others is risky and costly, so why do we so readily engage in it? Research in social psychology has suggested that typical individuals espouse multiple punishment motives (Carlsmith & Darley, 2008; Gromet & Darley, 2009; Vidmar & Miller, 1980), including the desire for retribution (McFatter, 1982; Orth, 2004; Vidmar, 1974; Warr et al, 1983) and consequentialist aims like deterrence (Crockett et al, 2014; Ellsworth & Ross, 1983; Vuk et al., 2020), and rehabilitation (Gromet & Darley, 2009). However, when tested in rivalrous contexts, retribution may play a dominant role (Aharoni & Fridlund, 2012; Carlsmith, 2006; Carlsmith, Darley, & Robinson, 2002; Carlsmith, Monahan, & Evans, 2007; Darley, Carlsmith, & Robinson, 2000).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%