Publication | Closed Access
Individual Differences in Attitudes Relevant to Juror Decision Making: Development and Validation of the Pretrial Juror Attitude Questionnaire (PJAQ)<sup>1</sup>
78
Citations
66
References
2008
Year
Forensic PsychologyBehavioral Decision MakingSocial PsychologyIndividual DifferencesScale DevelopmentLawCriminal LawIndividual Decision MakingPsychometricsClassical Test TheorySocial SciencesAttitude TheoryPsychologyCriminal Justice ProcessCriminal Justice SystemBiasBehavioral SciencesConfirmatory Factor AnalysisCriminal JusticeCase SummariesJuror Decision MakingAttitudes RelevantCriminal BehaviorProcedural Justice
This study involves scale development using theoretically derived items from previous measures and a lay consensual approach for generating new items. Confirmatory factor analysis was used to validate the emergent constructs assessing individual differences in attitudes of prospective jurors. Using case summaries, the Pretrial Juror Attitude Questionnaire (PJAQ) demonstrates superior predictive validity over commonly employed measures of pretrial bias. The PJAQ confirms the importance of theoretically derived constructs assessed by other scales and introduces new constructs to the jury decision‐making literature. The attitudes assessed by the PJAQ are conviction proneness, system confidence, cynicism toward the defense, racial bias, social justice, and innate criminality. Implications for assessing such attitudes and for better understanding the decision‐making process of jurors are discussed.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1