Publication | Closed Access
Children's Reactions to Mitigating Accounts: Apologies, Excuses, and Intentionality of Harm
95
Citations
23
References
1994
Year
EmpathyVictimologyVictimisationHypothetical SituationsTrauma In ChildPsychologySocial SciencesDevelopmental PsychologyHealth SciencesChild PsychologyBehavioral SciencesChild AbuseMale HarmdoerChildren's RightMoral PsychologyChild DevelopmentSexual AbusePsychological ViolenceOlder ChildrenAggressionChild Protection
Abstract One hundred sixty-four second- and fifth-grade Japanese children were presented with two hypothetical situations in which a male harmdoer was described as either intentionally or unintentionally harming another boy and was further described as giving apologies, excuses, or no account following the act. The older children perceived the harm-doer who apologized as less intentional and more remorseful, evaluated him as morally less negative, and forgave him more than the harmdoer who made excuses or the harmdoer who gave no account. The older children accepted the harmdoer's excuses only when they believed that the harm was not intended. The younger children did not react differentially to these accounts.
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