Examining gender bias in juror decision-making on a sexual assault case

Date

2024

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Faculty of Arts, University of Regina

Abstract

To examine gender bias in juror decision-making on a sexual assault case, we had 134 participants read a 216-word vignette depicting an ambiguous sexual assault scenario. Participants were asked to render a dichotomous verdict, rate their confidence in their verdict, and answer a series of questions regarding the situation they read. In addition, participants completed the Gender-Inclusive Rape Myth Acceptance Scale (Urban & Porras Pyland, 2022) and the Punishment Orientation Questionnaire (Yamamoto & Maeder, 2019). What participants did not know was that we manipulated the pronouns of both the defendant and complainant in a 3 (defendant: she, he, they) x 3 (complainant: she, he, they) design. We predicted that there would be a main effect for both defendant and complainant gender on continuous verdict confidence, yet neither effect was supported with a statistically significant result. We also predicted that there would be an interaction effect between defendant and complainant gender on continuous verdict confidence, but this was also not supported. A key issue in this study was the small sample size which significantly reduced power. It is encouraged that future research continues to investigate how non-binary actors are perceived by mock jurors in the context of sexual assault since it is a significant gap in the literature. Finally, future research should also examine different gender combinations when looking at mock juror decision-making in sexual assault cases to ensure all possible gender combinations within a sexual assault case are researched thoroughly to avoid a gender bias in a real courtroom.

Description

A Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Bachelor of Arts (Honours) in Psychology, University of Regina. 45 p.

Keywords

Discrimination in criminal justice administration, Gender bias, Sex discrimination in justice administration, Sexual abuse victims

Citation