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28 Women & Crim. Just. 1 (2018)

handle is hein.journals/wwcj28 and id is 1 raw text is: 





Women & Criminal Justice, 28:1-18, 2018                                     Routiedge
Copyright ( Taylor & Francis Group, LLC                                     T [Routledge
ISSN: 0897-4454 print/1541-0323 online                                 8    Taylor&Francis Group
DOI: 10.1080/08974454.2016.1250700



   Discretion and the Sex Dyad: Exploring the Interactive

Effects of Offender and Victim Sex on Reporting and Arrest

                    of  One-on-One Assaultive Crime


                                     Karen  G. Weiss
     Department  of Sociology and Anthropology, West Virginia University, Morgantown,
                                    West Virginia, USA

                                    Lynn A. Addington
  Department  of Justice, Law & Criminology, American  University, Washington, DC, USA

                                     James  J. Nolan
     Department  of Sociology and Anthropology, West Virginia University, Morgantown,
                                    West Virginia, USA


   Gender has been hypothesized to affect how violent offenders are treated within the criminal
   justice system, but studies have tended to ignore the role of the victim in decision making. This
   study explores the interactive effects of offender and victim sex (i.e., the sex dyad) on reporting
   and arrest of one-on-one assaultive crime. Using data from the National Crime Victimization Survey
   and National Incident-Based Reporting System, findings show that male-on-female offenses are
   reported to police more often than other dyads, but female-on-male offenses result in more arrests.
   Meanwhile, female-on-female offenses result in fewer arrests, despite nonsignificant differences in
   reporting. Implications of findings for theory and future research on gender discretion are discussed.

   Keywords:  arrest, gender discretion, NCVS, NIBRS, reporting to police, sex dyad, violent crime




                          DISCRETION AND THE SEX DYAD

Gender  is hypothesized to affect how female offenders are treated within the criminal justice
system based  on perceptions of what serious crime and dangerous offenders look like.' One
view, the chivalry perspective, predicts that female offenders are treated more leniently than
males due  to the perception that they are not as dangerous, blameworthy, or even capable of
inflicting serious physical harm (Belknap, 2015; Daly, 1994; Farnsworth & Teske, 1995; Herzog
&  Oreg, 2008). A second view, often referred to as the evil women perspective, predicts that
female offenders receive harsher treatment due to the perception that women who commit crime,

   Correspondence should be sent to Karen G. Weiss, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV 26506, USA.
E-mail: Karen.weiss@mail.wvu.edu

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