Role Congruity in the Offender-Victim Dyad: The Effect of Gendered Expectations on Crime Clearance
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Published:2022
Tucker S. McGrimmon, Lisa M. Dilks, 2022. "Role Congruity in the Offender-Victim Dyad: The Effect of Gendered Expectations on Crime Clearance", Advances in Group Processes, Will Kalkhoff, Shane R. Thye, Edward J. Lawler
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Abstract
The purpose is to theorize and empirically estimate the impact of the gendered nature of the offender-victim dyad and crime type on time to arrest.
Predictions regarding the impact of gendered offender-victim dyads and crime type on time to arrest are constructed by extending role congruity theory and tested using data from the FBI's National Incident-Based Reporting System across five crime types using dyadic-based event history methods.
The authors find strong empirical support that role expectations derived from the gender composition of offender-victim dyads and the masculinity of the crime type affect time to clearance.
This research is the first to theorize and empirically test the relative impact of role congruency and the relational nature of the offender-victim dyad in the adjudication process. Furthermore, the research shows that the construction of “normal crime” can be enhanced by applying a gendered and relational approach, based on social psychological theory, which is predictive of crime clearance.
Future research is required to validate the results for crimes where law enforcement has less discretion and are feminine typed.
The results imply that by accounting for the expectations generated by gender roles when applied to offender-victim dyads a casual mechanism is established that better organizes previously inconsistent results with respect to the impact of gender on time to clearance. Thus, the authors' utilization of role congruity theory of gender provides a more consistent explanation for inequalities in time to clearance that may be fruitful for evaluating other steps in the adjudication process.
