Social Influence and Crime‐Victim Decision Making
作者:
R. Barry Ruback,
Martin S. Greenberg,
David R. Westcott,
期刊:
Journal of Social Issues
(WILEY Available online 1984)
卷期:
Volume 40,
issue 1
页码: 51-76
ISSN:0022-4537
年代: 1984
DOI:10.1111/j.1540-4560.1984.tb01082.x
出版商: Blackwell Publishing Ltd
数据来源: WILEY
摘要:
Other people can affect a crime‐victim's decision to notify the police in at least four different ways: (a) by cuing the victim to a particular “script” or particular actions within a script, (b) by providing arguments and advice, (c) by indicating what normative standards operate within some group important to the victim, and (d) by providing socioemotional support or nonsupport. These four functions others serve can operate when the victim is labeling an event as a crime, when the victim is determining its seriousness, and when the victim is deciding what to do about it. This paper discusses these four functions in terms of relevant theoretical and empirical
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