Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Decision Making of Juries - Evaluation
- Evaluation of
Social Influence
- Majority
influence
- Varied opinions
- Hinsz and Davis (1984)
found the more varied
the opinions, the greater
the shift in opinion
- Deeper discussions
- Stasser and Stewart (1992) found that even when
instructed to discuss all the information, the PP's
focussed almost entirely on the shared information and
virtually excluded all the non-shared information
- Greater confidence
- Kerr (1987) claimed knowing more
people are on your side allows majority
members to be more argumentative, so
their views are more compelling
- Dangers of discussion
- Myers and Kaplan (1976) found
after discussing low-guilt cases
the juries recommended a more
lenient punishment and the
high-guilt cases were more harsh
- Minority
influence
- An attribution
effect
- Attribution theory;
their behaviour is
seen to be motivated
by a deep conviction
since they are
defending and
therefore we attribute
their beliefs to
internal, dispositional
causes rather than
external ones
- Minority size
- Tindale (1990) -
larger minorities are
more effective than
lone dissenters
- Wood (1994) - increasing
numbers have a greater effect
- increasing numbers mean that their
views cannot be easily dismissed
- Evaluation of
Characteristics of the
Defendant
- Ethnicity
- Contradictory evidence
- Mazzella and Feingold (1994) found no overall
effect of ethnicity on mock jury decisions
- however, punishment was affected by ethnic group
- The effect of the crime
- effect of ethnic group varies with the crime
- Gordon (1988) found that longer sentences were
given to black than to white defendants convicted
of burglary, but the reverse was true for fraud
- Attributional bias
- Johnson (2002) manipulated the ethnic group of
the defendant with a group of all white PP's
- found PP's made more situational
attributions about the white defendant
and suggested more lenient
punishments than for the black
defendants, which could explain
ethnic differences
- Physical attractivenss
- The effect of the crime
- effect of physical attractiveness
also varies with crime
- Sigall and Ostrove (1975) found unattractive defendants were given
longer sentences for burglary but the reverse was true for fraud
- supporting the idea that the attractiveness effect ceases to operate
if we believe that good looks have been used for criminal gain
- Gender bias
- Abwender and Hough (2001) found female jurors treated
attractive defendants significantly more leniently than
unattractive ones, but the reverse was true for male jurors
- however, such evidence can be criticised because in court the judgement
of guilt or innocence is absolute, so the situation was not entirely realistic