Colby et al. found that criminals are more likely to be classified at the pre-conventional level, with only 10 % of them reaching the post-conventional level
Who found research support for the link between level of moral reasoning and crime?
Palmer and Hollin
What did Palmer and Hollin do and find?
Compared moral reasoning in 332 non-offenders and 126 convicted offenders, using the Social Moral Reflection Measure Short Form (SRM-SF) which contains 11 moral dilemma-related questions. Found that offender group showed less mature moral reasoning than the non-offender group.
Limitation of moral reasoning: may depend on the offence
Thornton and Reid found that people who committed crimes for financial gain were more likely to show pre-conventioanl moral reasoning than those convicted of impulsive crimes (e.g. assault). Pre-conventional moral reasoning tends to be associated with crimes in which offenders believe they have a good chance of evading punishment.
Real world application for level of moral reasoning: Kohlberg found that 20 % of children aged 10 were at stage 1 and 60 % were at stage 2. This fits with the age of criminal responsibility in the UK (10)
Blackburn suggests that delinquents may show poor moral development due to lack of role-playing opportunities in childhood. (also supports Eysenck’ssocialisation idea)
Limitation of levels of morality: Biased sample
Giligan criticised the bias sample of participants in Kohlberg’s theory and the male oriented dilemmas that focused on justice rather than care and empathy.
Kohlberg’s theory was developed using a dilemma scenario and therefore is argued to be low in predictive reliability. The way a participant responds on a questionnaire and what they say they would do in certain situations may differ greatly from what would happen in reality.