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Threat Perception and American Support for Torture
Authors:Courtenay R. Conrad  Sarah E. Croco  Brad T. Gomez  Will H. Moore
Affiliation:1.University of California,Merced,USA;2.University of Maryland,College Park,USA;3.Florida State University,Tallahassee,USA;4.Arizona State University,Tempe,USA
Abstract:When do Americans support the government’s use of torture? We argue that perceptions of threat undermine the extent to which American public opinion serves as a bulwark against government torture. Although surveys demonstrate that a slim majority of the American public generally opposes torture, using a nationally-representative survey experiment, we show that Americans are considerably more supportive of government abuse when it is directed at individuals who they perceive as threatening: specifically, when a detainee has an Arabic name and when the alleged crime is terrorism. Given the malleability of public opinion as a potential constraint on abuse, our results underscore the importance of institutional protections of human rights.
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