The effect of situational norms on stigmatization of ex-offenders

Stigmatization affects the successful reintegration of ex-offenders back to society. This study thus seeks to find out if situational norms (loose or tight) can affect the level of stigmatization people feel toward ex-offenders. It is hypothesized that participants in the loose condition would show...

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Main Author: Wong, Wei Jin
Other Authors: Cheon Bobby K.
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/74149
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-741492019-12-10T13:17:47Z The effect of situational norms on stigmatization of ex-offenders Wong, Wei Jin Cheon Bobby K. School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences Stigmatization affects the successful reintegration of ex-offenders back to society. This study thus seeks to find out if situational norms (loose or tight) can affect the level of stigmatization people feel toward ex-offenders. It is hypothesized that participants in the loose condition would show less stigmatizing views toward ex-offenders compared to those in the tight condition. A prime image (hotel room or job interview) was used to activate participants’ situational norms of the situation portrayed and were shown individually to 88 undergraduate participants (44 males, 43 females). Participants’ ratings of the tightness or looseness of the situation, as well as the strength of the norms and tolerance for deviance were measured. Measures of crime attribution, perceived severity of crime, feelings toward the ex-offender, as well as desired social distance were also used to measure for stigmatizing attitudes. Results showed that participants displayed significant differences in their ratings of the tightness-looseness of the situations, and those in the loose condition showed significantly less attribution of the crime to the ex-offender and less perceived severity of the crime committed. However, no significant differences were observed in their feelings toward the ex-offender or desired social distance from the ex-offender between the two conditions. It is suggested that this mixed support for the hypothesis could be due to age, cultural, and gender limitations of the participants or could also be explained by the Theory of Planned Behaviour. Bachelor of Arts 2018-05-01T04:34:09Z 2018-05-01T04:34:09Z 2018 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/74149 en Nanyang Technological University 55 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences
Wong, Wei Jin
The effect of situational norms on stigmatization of ex-offenders
description Stigmatization affects the successful reintegration of ex-offenders back to society. This study thus seeks to find out if situational norms (loose or tight) can affect the level of stigmatization people feel toward ex-offenders. It is hypothesized that participants in the loose condition would show less stigmatizing views toward ex-offenders compared to those in the tight condition. A prime image (hotel room or job interview) was used to activate participants’ situational norms of the situation portrayed and were shown individually to 88 undergraduate participants (44 males, 43 females). Participants’ ratings of the tightness or looseness of the situation, as well as the strength of the norms and tolerance for deviance were measured. Measures of crime attribution, perceived severity of crime, feelings toward the ex-offender, as well as desired social distance were also used to measure for stigmatizing attitudes. Results showed that participants displayed significant differences in their ratings of the tightness-looseness of the situations, and those in the loose condition showed significantly less attribution of the crime to the ex-offender and less perceived severity of the crime committed. However, no significant differences were observed in their feelings toward the ex-offender or desired social distance from the ex-offender between the two conditions. It is suggested that this mixed support for the hypothesis could be due to age, cultural, and gender limitations of the participants or could also be explained by the Theory of Planned Behaviour.
author2 Cheon Bobby K.
author_facet Cheon Bobby K.
Wong, Wei Jin
format Final Year Project
author Wong, Wei Jin
author_sort Wong, Wei Jin
title The effect of situational norms on stigmatization of ex-offenders
title_short The effect of situational norms on stigmatization of ex-offenders
title_full The effect of situational norms on stigmatization of ex-offenders
title_fullStr The effect of situational norms on stigmatization of ex-offenders
title_full_unstemmed The effect of situational norms on stigmatization of ex-offenders
title_sort effect of situational norms on stigmatization of ex-offenders
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/74149
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