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Effect of Perceived Deterrence on Compliance with Authorities: The Moderating Influence of Procedural Justice

NCJ Number
245178
Journal
International Journal of Criminology and Sociology Volume: 1 Dated: 2012 Pages: 151-161
Author(s)
Peter Verboon; Marius van Dijke
Date Published
2012
Length
11 pages
Annotation
This study investigated the role of procedural justice in relation to deterrence.
Abstract
In order to stimulate compliance, authorities often use deterrence instruments. However, scientific literature from the fields of criminology, sociology and psychology has not been consistent in when or why deterrence is effective in shaping compliance. In the present study the authors investigated the role of procedural justice in relation to deterrence. Procedural justice has strong effects on people's attitudes and behavior regarding the social collective, including compliance with authorities. The authors argued that particularly authorities who are considered procedurally fair are successful in stimulating compliance with the use of deterrence instruments. In support of these ideas, a field survey in which the study focused on sanction severity as the first element of deterrence and an experiment in which the study focused on detection probability as the second element of deterrence revealed that procedural justice and deterrence instruments interactively strengthen each other's effect in promoting compliance. These finding may partly explain the sometimes-contradictory results from prior work about the effectiveness of deterrence by supporting a justice perspective on the effectiveness of deterrence in increasing compliance with authorities. (Published Abstract)