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Exploring the stigmatisation of offending and non-offending paedophiles: a terror management approach

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Exploring the stigmatisation of offending and non-offending paedophiles: a terror management approach. / Maroño, A.; Bartels, R.M.; Hill, K. et al.
In: Journal of Criminal Psychology, Vol. 13, No. 3, 29.06.2023, p. 157-172.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Maroño, A, Bartels, RM, Hill, K, Papagathonikou, T & Hitchman, G 2023, 'Exploring the stigmatisation of offending and non-offending paedophiles: a terror management approach', Journal of Criminal Psychology, vol. 13, no. 3, pp. 157-172. https://doi.org/10.1108/JCP-07-2022-0021

APA

Maroño, A., Bartels, R. M., Hill, K., Papagathonikou, T., & Hitchman, G. (2023). Exploring the stigmatisation of offending and non-offending paedophiles: a terror management approach. Journal of Criminal Psychology, 13(3), 157-172. https://doi.org/10.1108/JCP-07-2022-0021

Vancouver

Maroño A, Bartels RM, Hill K, Papagathonikou T, Hitchman G. Exploring the stigmatisation of offending and non-offending paedophiles: a terror management approach. Journal of Criminal Psychology. 2023 Jun 29;13(3):157-172. Epub 2023 Feb 28. doi: 10.1108/JCP-07-2022-0021

Author

Maroño, A. ; Bartels, R.M. ; Hill, K. et al. / Exploring the stigmatisation of offending and non-offending paedophiles : a terror management approach. In: Journal of Criminal Psychology. 2023 ; Vol. 13, No. 3. pp. 157-172.

Bibtex

@article{17057f4d6f164d0f8fb9bdc507930b40,
title = "Exploring the stigmatisation of offending and non-offending paedophiles: a terror management approach",
abstract = "Purpose: Paedophilic individuals are a highly misunderstood and stigmatised group, with the general public tending to equate paedophilia with child sexual abuse. Given that paedophilia is often conflated as a psychiatric/mental health disorder and an extreme violent offence, the current study examined whether the stigma towards paedophilic individuals is related to negative associations with severe mental illness and extreme violence. The authors also used the terror management theory (TMT) to provide further insights into why paedophilia is so highly stigmatised. Design/methodology/approach: A sample of 126 participants was split into one of six conditions and provided punitive and moral character judgements, as well as salience of death thoughts. Conditions were divided into three main stigma conditions (paedophilia vs schizophrenia vs homicidal ideation), which were further divided into two conditions (offending vs non-offending). Findings: Results showed that judgements were harsher in the offending conditions than the non-offending conditions. Results also showed that the stigmatisation of paedophilic and schizophrenic individuals may be mediated by terror management processes. These findings suggest that paedophilia is believed to be associated with severe forms of mental illness where an individual is not able to control their own state of mind. Research limitations/implications: Thus, addressing perceptions of dangerousness towards individuals with severe mental illness is a crucial step towards developing effective strategies to help reduce such stigma. Originality/value: As one of the first studies to use TMT in this way, the current study provided much-needed insight into an important and under-researched area using available methods for such a sensitive topic. ",
keywords = "Mortality salience, Non-offending paedophile, Non-sexual offense, Paedophilia, Stigma, Terror management theory",
author = "A. Maro{\~n}o and R.M. Bartels and K. Hill and T. Papagathonikou and G. Hitchman",
year = "2023",
month = jun,
day = "29",
doi = "10.1108/JCP-07-2022-0021",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
pages = "157--172",
journal = "Journal of Criminal Psychology",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Exploring the stigmatisation of offending and non-offending paedophiles

T2 - a terror management approach

AU - Maroño, A.

AU - Bartels, R.M.

AU - Hill, K.

AU - Papagathonikou, T.

AU - Hitchman, G.

PY - 2023/6/29

Y1 - 2023/6/29

N2 - Purpose: Paedophilic individuals are a highly misunderstood and stigmatised group, with the general public tending to equate paedophilia with child sexual abuse. Given that paedophilia is often conflated as a psychiatric/mental health disorder and an extreme violent offence, the current study examined whether the stigma towards paedophilic individuals is related to negative associations with severe mental illness and extreme violence. The authors also used the terror management theory (TMT) to provide further insights into why paedophilia is so highly stigmatised. Design/methodology/approach: A sample of 126 participants was split into one of six conditions and provided punitive and moral character judgements, as well as salience of death thoughts. Conditions were divided into three main stigma conditions (paedophilia vs schizophrenia vs homicidal ideation), which were further divided into two conditions (offending vs non-offending). Findings: Results showed that judgements were harsher in the offending conditions than the non-offending conditions. Results also showed that the stigmatisation of paedophilic and schizophrenic individuals may be mediated by terror management processes. These findings suggest that paedophilia is believed to be associated with severe forms of mental illness where an individual is not able to control their own state of mind. Research limitations/implications: Thus, addressing perceptions of dangerousness towards individuals with severe mental illness is a crucial step towards developing effective strategies to help reduce such stigma. Originality/value: As one of the first studies to use TMT in this way, the current study provided much-needed insight into an important and under-researched area using available methods for such a sensitive topic.

AB - Purpose: Paedophilic individuals are a highly misunderstood and stigmatised group, with the general public tending to equate paedophilia with child sexual abuse. Given that paedophilia is often conflated as a psychiatric/mental health disorder and an extreme violent offence, the current study examined whether the stigma towards paedophilic individuals is related to negative associations with severe mental illness and extreme violence. The authors also used the terror management theory (TMT) to provide further insights into why paedophilia is so highly stigmatised. Design/methodology/approach: A sample of 126 participants was split into one of six conditions and provided punitive and moral character judgements, as well as salience of death thoughts. Conditions were divided into three main stigma conditions (paedophilia vs schizophrenia vs homicidal ideation), which were further divided into two conditions (offending vs non-offending). Findings: Results showed that judgements were harsher in the offending conditions than the non-offending conditions. Results also showed that the stigmatisation of paedophilic and schizophrenic individuals may be mediated by terror management processes. These findings suggest that paedophilia is believed to be associated with severe forms of mental illness where an individual is not able to control their own state of mind. Research limitations/implications: Thus, addressing perceptions of dangerousness towards individuals with severe mental illness is a crucial step towards developing effective strategies to help reduce such stigma. Originality/value: As one of the first studies to use TMT in this way, the current study provided much-needed insight into an important and under-researched area using available methods for such a sensitive topic.

KW - Mortality salience

KW - Non-offending paedophile

KW - Non-sexual offense

KW - Paedophilia

KW - Stigma

KW - Terror management theory

U2 - 10.1108/JCP-07-2022-0021

DO - 10.1108/JCP-07-2022-0021

M3 - Journal article

VL - 13

SP - 157

EP - 172

JO - Journal of Criminal Psychology

JF - Journal of Criminal Psychology

IS - 3

ER -