Kohlberg (1968) proposed peoples decisions and judgements on issues of right and wrong can be summarised in a stage theory of moral reasoning - the higher the stage , the more sophisticated the reasoning
based theory on peoples responses to a series of moral dilemmas
studies suggested that offenders tend to show a lower level of moral reasoning than non-offenders
showed that a group of violent youths were at a significantly lower level of moral development than non-violent youths - even after controlling for social background
level of moral reasoning: link with criminality -
offenders more likely to classified at the pre-conventional level of Kohlberg's model (stages 1 and 2)
non-offenders have generally progressed to the conventional level and beyond
pre-conventional level - characterised by a need to avoid punishment and gain rewards - associated with less mature childlike reasoning
level of moral reasoning: link with criminality -
offenders more likely to be classified at pre-conventional level of Kohlberg's model (stages 1, 2)
non-offenders generally progressed to conventional level and beyond
pre-conventional level - need to avoid punishment + gain rewards - associated with less mature childlike reasoning
study support - offenders often egocentric + display poorer social perspective-taking skills
individuals who reason at higher levels sympathise more with rights of others and exhibit conventional behaviours (honesty, generosity, non-violence)
cognitive distortions -
errors or biases in peoples information processing system characterised by faulty thinking
research linked this to the way in which offenders interpret other peoples behaviour and justify their own actions
hostile attribution bias -
evidence suggests a propensity for violence is often associated with a tendency to misinterpret the actions of others
offenders may misread non-aggressive cues which may trigger a disproportionate, violent response
Jusyte (2014) presented 55 violent offenders with images of emotionally ambiguous facial expressions - when compared to control group, violent offenders significantly more likely to perceive images as angry and hostile
roots may be apparent in childhood
minimalisation -
an attempt to deny or downplay the seriousness of an offence - elsewhere been referred to as the application of a 'euphemistic label' for behaviour
eg burglars may describe themselves as 'doing a job' or 'supporting my family' to minimise the seriousness of their offences
studies suggest that individuals who commit sexual offences are particularly prone to minimalisation
Barbaree (1991) found among 26 incarcerated rapists, 54% denied they had committed an offence at all and a further 40% minimised the harm they had caused to the victim