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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Ambivalent sexism, empathy and law enforcement attitudes towards partner violence against women among male police officers
Marisol LilaFernando GarcíaEnrique Graciasubject
media_common.quotation_subjectLaw enforcementPoison controlHuman factors and ergonomicsEmpathySuicide preventionPreferencePathology and Forensic MedicineAmbivalent sexismInjury preventionPsychologyLawSocial psychologyGeneral Psychologymedia_commondescription
Police attitudes towards partner violence against women (PVAW) can play an important role in their evaluation and responses to this type of violence. The present study aims to examine ambivalent sexism and empathy as determinants of male police officers' law enforcement attitudes towards PVAW. The study sample was composed by 404 male police officers. Results suggested that male police officers scoring low in benevolent sexism expressed a general preference for unconditional law enforcement (i.e. regardless of the victim's willingness to press charges against the offender), whereas those scoring high in benevolent sexism expressed a preference for conditional law enforcement (i.e. depending on the willingness of the victim to press charges against the offender). Results also showed that police officers scoring high in empathy and low in hostile sexism were those who expressed a general preference for unconditional law enforcement. The presence of sexist attitudes and low levels of empathy among some polic...
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2013-11-01 | Psychology, Crime & Law |