Filter

  • Advanced Filters:

  • to
  • Specific Data Sources:

    All Edit

    Select All  |  Select None

Reset filters

DeepDyve - Search, Rent, Read
The easiest way for you to get scholarly articles:

  • Millions of articles from over 6,000 authoritative journals.
  • Get any 40 rentable articles for just $40 a month.
  • Read rented articles for an entire year.
  • Unused rentals get rolled over.

Bookmark

Effects of Item Order on the Perceived Seriousness of Crime: A Reexamination

Preview Only

Effects of Item Order on the Perceived Seriousness of Crime: A Reexamination

Abstract

This article examines the effects of item order on the perceived seriousness of crime. Previous research that addressed this question rotated only one offense to three locations on a questionnaire and concluded that item order had no effect. This research rotates several offenses, including violent, property, white-collar, and morals offenses. The perceived seriousness of an item was hypothesized to shift toward the severity of the preceding offense. The results substantiate this effect. In fact, item order was found to explain approximately the same amount of variation in the perceived seriousness of an offense as did respondents' demographic characteristics.
Loading next page...
1 Page

Preview Only. This article cannot be rented because we do not currently have permission from the publisher.

 
/lp/sage/effects-of-item-order-on-the-perceived-seriousness-of-crime-a-qWmQykgsR7
Title
Effects of Item Order on the Perceived Seriousness of Crime: A Reexamination
Author(s)
EVANS,SANDRA S.; SCOTT,JOSEPH E.
Journal
Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency , Volume 21 (2): 139 SAGE – May 1, 1984
Publisher
Sage Publications
Copyright
Copyright © 1984 by SAGE Publications
ISSN
0022-4278
eISSN
0022-4278
D.O.I.
10.1177/0022427884021002004
Publisher site
Get PDF