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How ‘himpathy’ helps shield perpetrators of ******* misconduct from repercussions

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

Former U.S. President Donald Trump has faced

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over the decades. He’s the first president to
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, and in January, he was ordered to pay over
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to E. Jean Carroll for defamatory statements related to her ******* ******** claims.

Despite all this, many of Trump’s supporters anticipate his history of ******* misconduct will

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. Some even believe he is a
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. Alabama Senator Tommy Tuberville went so far as to say the ******* ******** verdict made him
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In contrast,

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that she has experienced “almost an endless stream of people repeating what Donald Trump said—that I was a liar, I was in it for the money, I can’t wait for the payout…that I was too ugly to go on living.” In addition to the barrage of online trolling, she also received
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.

These outcomes are consistent with prior research that has found most men accused of ******* misconduct

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such as
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. In contrast, women who report such incidents often face significant consequences, including
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or
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.

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, we sought to understand why alleged perpetrators of ******* ******** often escape repercussions while their accusers incur intense backlash in organizations.

Responses to ******* misconduct

Across five studies using real-world stories from organizations, social media responses to #MeToo claims, and experiments, we examined how third parties—people who learn of ******* misconduct claims but are not directly involved—respond to ******* misconduct accusations across several industries.

Our research found third parties tend to evaluate individuals involved in ******* misconduct claims based on their moral values as outlined by

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.

This theory argues there are five global moral values: alleviating suffering (care), promoting equity and equality (fairness), being loyal and devoted to your groups (loyalty), showing deference to those in power (authority), and practicing physical and spiritual cleanliness (purity).

Research has found that people value the five moral foundations

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. Some people tend to care more about the foundations of respect for authority, loyalty and purity, while others tend to emphasize care and fairness.

People who highly value respect for authority, loyalty and purity tend to view behavior that threatens the stability of groups and institutions as immoral. We build on this to suggest that ******* misconduct allegations against men in positions of authority could be offensive to those who endorse these values.

Our research indicates that moral concerns about loyalty, authority and purity can give rise to

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—a term coined by philosopher Kate Manne that describes the excessive sympathy directed toward alleged male perpetrators and the anger directed toward accusing female victims.

Moral drivers of ‘himpathy’

In a study of 4,000 tweets from the #MeToo movement, we found tweets containing words related to authority, loyalty and purity were more likely to express sympathy toward alleged perpetrators and anger toward accusing victims.

We also found a similar pattern in stories people shared about witnessing or hearing about workplace ******* harassment. People who valued loyalty, authority and purity were more likely to feel sympathetic toward the person accused and ****** toward the accuser.

Our studies showed that himpathy negatively impacts judgements about credibility and results in motivations to resolve injustice in favour of the perpetrator rather than the victim. This ultimately leads to a reduced inclination to punish the alleged perpetrator and a greater willingness to penalize the accusing victim.

These moral concerns seem to flip the expected narrative on its head: when people care a lot about authority, loyalty and purity, they are more likely to construe the accused as the victim and his accuser as the villain.

Our findings suggest that a small yet influential subset of employees is prone to hostile moral reactions toward victims, which might motivate them to protect perpetrators and potentially allow for misconduct to continue.

What leaders can do

Although himpathy will likely continue to occur in political arenas and organizations, there are steps managers and leaders can take to prevent himpathy from protecting perpetrators and causing additional harm to victims.

In one of the experiments in our study, we found that leaders can contribute to increased backlash against victims when they question the victim’s morality in front of their co-workers who strongly value loyalty, authority, and purity. Thus, we recommend managers remain as neutral as possible to avoid facilitating **********, inequitable social consequences for either party involved in a ******* ******** claim.

We further encourage organizations to hire third-party investigators not emotionally connected to the case. If this isn’t possible, leaders can build impartial investigative committees with employees holding diverse perspectives and values, which would help prevent anyone who may feel sympathetic to the accused from overly influencing disciplinary decisions.

Once an investigation has taken place, the appropriate actions can and should be taken. In doing so, organizations can reduce backlash toward victims who come forward, like Carroll, and ensure appropriate actions are taken when misconduct occurs.

Provided by
The Conversation


This article is republished from

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under a Creative Commons license. Read the
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.

Citation:
How ‘himpathy’ helps shield perpetrators of ******* misconduct from repercussions (2024, March 21)
retrieved 21 March 2024
from

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.





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Science, Physics News, Science news, Technology News, Physics, Materials, Nanotech, Technology, Science
#himpathy #helps #shield #perpetrators #******* #misconduct #repercussions

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