Inbal Peleg-Koriat's research while affiliated with Max Stern Yezreel Valley College and other places
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Publications (12)
The aim of the present study was to examine barriers to reporting sexual offenses as reflected in texts by victims who participated in the #WhyIDidntReport protest that revolved around the reasons for not reporting sexual offenses. Content analysis was used to analyze 95 public posts of Israeli victims published on social media. The findings reveal...
Restorative justice (RJ) is oriented to respond to crime in ways that would repair individual, relational, and social harm. This study examined the relationship between type of offense and public attitudes toward RJ, in addition to the psychological mechanisms undergirding this relationship. We examined a model of three offense types (sexual, viole...
Restorative justice (RJ) is a way of doing justice following an offense that is primarily oriented towards repairing individual, relational, and social harm. This study examined how RJ processes, conducted following intrafamilial sexual abuse, helped restore the family relationship, and assessed their contribution to the healing and recovery of the...
This research examined the role of guilt and shame proneness among people in custody in shaping attitudes toward restorative justice (RJ) and in predicting the effectiveness of RJ practices. Study 1 ( n = 110) examined the correlation between participant guilt and shame proneness and willingness to participate in an RJ process. It revealed that pro...
The way people perceive and think about crime and punishment is a central aspect of normative culture and formal social control. This study aims to provide an in-depth understanding of the role played by malleability beliefs and psychological distance in the public’s punitive attitudes. To address these goals, we employed a 2X2 factorial experiment...
The study examined ‘the day after’ the #MeToo protest, and proposes channeling the outcry of millions of women toward developing and establishing alternative mechanisms for dealing with sexual offences, focusing on restorative justice conferencing. A mixed-methods design (quantitative and qualitative) was employed to empirically examine the public’...
In the present study, we conducted an empirical experiment to examine whether exposure to a victim awareness procedure would affect inmates’ attitudes toward participating in a restorative-justice process. In addition, the study sought to evaluate whether there are differences between inmates serving their sentences in prisons with different therap...
For decades, legal formalism has held that judicial sentencing decisions should be guided by facts, not subjective variables. However, scholars and legal practitioners have long been aware of the influence of psychological factors on legal decision making. In this article we report on two studies that examined a model suggesting that belief in mall...
Perceived procedural justice (PPJ) was recently associated with collaborative conflict management styles among married and cohabiting spouses. In a correlational study of 160 adults, we tested how avoidant and anxious attachment and personal power perceptions moderate the associations between spouse’s PPJ and participants’ conflict management style...
Interpersonal conflict is integral to intimate spousal relationships, and while potentially destructive, it can also enhance sharing of feelings and thoughts and the sense of being loved. Its positive or negative effects partly rely on how partners deal with it. This study was conducted in Israel with 160 participants. All participants were Jewish...
In this study, we examined the role that perceived procedural justice (PPJ) plays in the conflict management behaviors that intimate spouses adopt and endorse. In this context, PPJ has been defined as the degree to which one perceives that his or her spouse makes decisions fairly, considerately, and in a participatory manner. To test the impact of...
Citations
... Yet, it has been illustrated in studies examining intractable conflicts such as the Israeli-Palestinian conflict (Goldenberg et al., 2018), that even after years of strife and harm, people's fundamental beliefs about the ability of the other group to change can be altered, resulting in more positive attitudes toward the conflict and its possible resolution (Halperin et al., 2011). We therefore conclude that the same can be applied to the criminal context through various psychoeducational tools, such as exposure to the stories of sex offenders who have changed and by disseminating studies of successful RJ processes in cases of sexual assault (Klar-Chalamish & Peleg-Koriat, 2021). ...
... They are also more likely to consider external factors that contribute to a person's behavior rather than focus on internal attributes-a cognitive process associated with less punitiveness (Tam et al., 2013). Indeed, prior research shows that growth mindsets are associated with more positive attitudes toward offenders, greater support for their reintegration into the community (Rade et al., 2018), less punitive sentencing goals (Tam et al., 2013), and greater support of restorative and rehabilitative justice practices (Moss et al., 2019;Peleg-koriat et al., 2020). ...
... The main aim of this study was to examine whether type of offense played an important role in shaping attitudes toward restorative justice (RJ) and whether incremental beliefs explained differences in public attitudes toward RJ across offense types. Previous studies on public support for RJ mostly differentiated between offenses according to perceived seriousness (e.g., Gromet & Darley, 2006;Roberts & Stalans, 2004), or investigated individual attitudes toward a specific category such as sexual offenses (e.g., Peleg-Koriat & Klar-Chalamish, 2020). Hitherto, no research examined psychological mechanisms that could explain public support for RJ as varying across offense types. ...
... Yet, Bouffard and colleagues (2017) point out use of little or no victim dialogue in RJIs, similar to the current study, shows improved recidivism outcomes compared to punitive interventions. Two more recent studies further highlight the benefits on reparation outcomes or plans to engage in other RJIs when using "surrogate" victims or no victim dialogue in RJIs (Hobbs et al., 2021;Weimann-Saks & Peleg-Koriat, 2020). Overall, our findings complement the body of literature focusing on alternative implementation methods of RJIs and suggest lack of dialogue does not preclude benefits of increasing victim awareness. ...
... International use of RJ remains modest (Butler & Maruna, 2016;Weimann-Saks et al., 2019). Several institutional and social barriers prevent large-scale utilization of RJ (Avieli et al., 2021;Laxminarayan & Wolthuis, 2015). ...
... To put it in simple words, using a constructive conflict management approach can add to the subjective well-being of married couples (Hussein & Al-mamary, 2019;Li et al., 2020;Peleg-Koriat et al., 2018). Research shows that marital affection is related to positive resolution strategies. ...