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Vicarious Annihilation: The Effect of Mortality Salience on Perceptions of Hate Crimes

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Law and Human Behavior

Abstract

Previous research has found that reminding participants of their mortality creates a need for individuals to maintain and defend subjective cultural worldviews. As a result, mortality salient participants typically strive to uphold legal sanctions and also react negatively to individuals who espouse alternative worldview beliefs, exhibiting behaviors toward those targets ranging from verbal derogation to physical aggression. This paper extends this line of research by examining perceptions of hate crimes. Hate crimes represent a unique class of crime where both the perpetrator and victim may be viewed as worldview violators. Study 1 revealed that mortality salient participants were more supportive of hate crime legislation than were control participants when hate crimes were described in abstract terms and no specific victim was mentioned. In Study 2, a specific victim who posed a potential worldview threat was identified. In this case, mortality salient participants were less punitive toward offenders who attacked these specific worldview-threatening victims.

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Lieberman, J.D., Arndt, J., Personius, J. et al. Vicarious Annihilation: The Effect of Mortality Salience on Perceptions of Hate Crimes. Law Hum Behav 25, 547–566 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1012738706166

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1012738706166

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