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Journal of Indian Institute of Management Bangalore

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From wrongdoing to imprisonment: Test of a causal–moral model

Ramadhar Singh, Joseph J.P. Simons, William T. Self, Philip E. Tetlock, Paul A. Bell, James May, Richard J. Crisp, Susheel Kaur, Jacob A. Benfield and William J. Sziemko
Journal Name
IIMB Management Review
Journal Publication
others
Publication Year
2012
Journal Publications Functional Area
Organizational Behavior & Human Resources Management
Publication Date
Vol. 24, Issue 2, June 2012, P 73-78
Abstract

The authors tested a causal-moral model of punishment in which (a) causal attribution and moral responsibility are distinct precursors of punishment, and (b) dispositional attribution leads to blame which, in turn, determines imprisonment. Specifically, whereas severity of outcome impacts punishment directly, circumstances of the crime and the culture of the observers impact punishment through causal attribution and blame, respectively. In an experiment, Singaporeans and Americans read about a crime that (a) was committed intentionally or under an extenuating circumstance and (b) had low or severe outcome for the victim. They made dispositional attribution to, assigned blame to, and recommended imprisonment for the offender. Results supported the hypotheses and the causal-moral path model that specified a direct effect of severity of outcome, an indirect effect of country via blame, and the indirect effects of circumstance via dispositional attribution to blame on imprisonment.

From wrongdoing to imprisonment: Test of a causal–moral model

Author(s) Name: Ramadhar Singh, Joseph J.P. Simons, William T. Self, Philip E. Tetlock, Paul A. Bell, James May, Richard J. Crisp, Susheel Kaur, Jacob A. Benfield and William J. Sziemko
Journal Name: IIMB Management Review
Volume: Vol. 24, Issue 2, June 2012, P 73-78
Year of Publication: 2012
Abstract:

The authors tested a causal-moral model of punishment in which (a) causal attribution and moral responsibility are distinct precursors of punishment, and (b) dispositional attribution leads to blame which, in turn, determines imprisonment. Specifically, whereas severity of outcome impacts punishment directly, circumstances of the crime and the culture of the observers impact punishment through causal attribution and blame, respectively. In an experiment, Singaporeans and Americans read about a crime that (a) was committed intentionally or under an extenuating circumstance and (b) had low or severe outcome for the victim. They made dispositional attribution to, assigned blame to, and recommended imprisonment for the offender. Results supported the hypotheses and the causal-moral path model that specified a direct effect of severity of outcome, an indirect effect of country via blame, and the indirect effects of circumstance via dispositional attribution to blame on imprisonment.