TY - JOUR
T1 - Public Opinion on the Psychological and Legal Aspects of Televising Rape Trials
AU - Swim, Janet
AU - Borgida, Eugene
PY - 1987/5
Y1 - 1987/5
N2 - Public opinion about electronic media coverage of rape trials was examined using a cross‐sectional random probability survey sample of the Minneapolis‐St. Paul metropolitan area. Public beliefs about the legal and constitutional issues, the psychological effects of the media on trial participants, and the extended effects of media coverage on the public were examined. Descriptive results indicated that the public generally disapproved of electronic media coverage of courtroom trials. More importantly, women reported that they would be less likely to report a rape knowing that other rape trials had been televised. A multiple regression analysis relating beliefs to approval of televising rape trials showed that disapproval was most closely related to respondents' views of the symbolic constitutional issues. A second multiple regression analysis indicated that believing that “televising rape trials would increase a rape victim's trauma” was most highly related to women's behavioral intention to report a rape.
AB - Public opinion about electronic media coverage of rape trials was examined using a cross‐sectional random probability survey sample of the Minneapolis‐St. Paul metropolitan area. Public beliefs about the legal and constitutional issues, the psychological effects of the media on trial participants, and the extended effects of media coverage on the public were examined. Descriptive results indicated that the public generally disapproved of electronic media coverage of courtroom trials. More importantly, women reported that they would be less likely to report a rape knowing that other rape trials had been televised. A multiple regression analysis relating beliefs to approval of televising rape trials showed that disapproval was most closely related to respondents' views of the symbolic constitutional issues. A second multiple regression analysis indicated that believing that “televising rape trials would increase a rape victim's trauma” was most highly related to women's behavioral intention to report a rape.
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U2 - 10.1111/j.1559-1816.1987.tb00327.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1559-1816.1987.tb00327.x
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84935115054
SN - 0021-9029
VL - 17
SP - 507
EP - 518
JO - Journal of Applied Social Psychology
JF - Journal of Applied Social Psychology
IS - 5
ER -