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More than ten years after: The long-term stability of informed death penalty opinions
Authors:Robert M Bohm  Brenda L Vogel
Affiliation:a Department of Criminal Justice and Legal Studies, University of Central Florida, P.O. Box 161600, Orlando, FL 32816, USA
b Department of Criminal Justice, California State University, Long Beach, 1250 Bellflower Blvd., Long Beach, CA 90840, USA
Abstract:This panel study examined the stability of informed death penalty opinions more than ten years after students participated in a semester long death penalty class. Results for two “abstract” opinion measures indicated that support of the death penalty significantly diminished after exposure to the death penalty class, yet rebounded to initial pretest levels two to three years later. After more than ten years, the data revealed small increases in support of the death penalty from the first follow-up period. Personal involvement measures did not change significantly across the four points in time. The relative importance of four of the eleven reasons for death penalty support or opposition changed significantly over time. Those changes varied across measures. Some increased in importance over time, while others decreased in importance. Finally, race was a significant factor in every opinion measure, as well as in nine of the eleven reasons for death penalty support or opposition.
Keywords:Death penalty   Death penalty opinions   The Marshall hypotheses   Opinion change   Classroom knowledge
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