Offender Variables: Unique Predictors of Benevolence, Avoidance, and Revenge?

Most past research on interpersonal forgiveness has emphasized qualities of the betrayed partner (e.g. trait forgiveness, dispositional empathy, narcissism) or relationship factors (e.g., relational closeness) in predicting forgiveness. However, research has rarely considered characteristics of the...

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Main Author: Carmody, Patrick C.
Format: Others
Published: Trace: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_gradthes/691
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spelling ndltd-UTENN-oai-trace.tennessee.edu-utk_gradthes-17852011-12-13T16:15:45Z Offender Variables: Unique Predictors of Benevolence, Avoidance, and Revenge? Carmody, Patrick C. Most past research on interpersonal forgiveness has emphasized qualities of the betrayed partner (e.g. trait forgiveness, dispositional empathy, narcissism) or relationship factors (e.g., relational closeness) in predicting forgiveness. However, research has rarely considered characteristics of the offender as predictors of forgiveness, as when a victim comes to wish the offender well and feel warmth toward him/her, and unforgiveness, as when a victim avoids or retaliates against an offender. Therefore the current project sought to assess the unique contribution of offenders’ personality over and above the aforementioned established predictors of forgiveness and unforgiveness outcomes on the Transgression-Related Interpersonal Motivations (TRIM) inventory. It was expected that offender variables (such as high narcissism, low dispositional empathy, low honesty-humility, and high agreeableness) would account for additional, unique variance in predicting forgiveness beyond the known correlates of forgiveness and unforgiveness (e.g., high relational closeness to offender, low betrayal severity, high trait forgiveness, low narcissism). Results for TRIM Benevolence and Avoidance, but not TRIM Revenge, were consistent with the study’s hypothesis, such that offender variables contributed significant unique variance above established predictors. Implications for the study of offender variables are discussed, as well as future directions research might consider. 2010-08-01 text application/pdf http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_gradthes/691 Masters Theses Trace: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange forgiveness betrayal personality Personality and Social Contexts Social Psychology
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic forgiveness
betrayal
personality
Personality and Social Contexts
Social Psychology
spellingShingle forgiveness
betrayal
personality
Personality and Social Contexts
Social Psychology
Carmody, Patrick C.
Offender Variables: Unique Predictors of Benevolence, Avoidance, and Revenge?
description Most past research on interpersonal forgiveness has emphasized qualities of the betrayed partner (e.g. trait forgiveness, dispositional empathy, narcissism) or relationship factors (e.g., relational closeness) in predicting forgiveness. However, research has rarely considered characteristics of the offender as predictors of forgiveness, as when a victim comes to wish the offender well and feel warmth toward him/her, and unforgiveness, as when a victim avoids or retaliates against an offender. Therefore the current project sought to assess the unique contribution of offenders’ personality over and above the aforementioned established predictors of forgiveness and unforgiveness outcomes on the Transgression-Related Interpersonal Motivations (TRIM) inventory. It was expected that offender variables (such as high narcissism, low dispositional empathy, low honesty-humility, and high agreeableness) would account for additional, unique variance in predicting forgiveness beyond the known correlates of forgiveness and unforgiveness (e.g., high relational closeness to offender, low betrayal severity, high trait forgiveness, low narcissism). Results for TRIM Benevolence and Avoidance, but not TRIM Revenge, were consistent with the study’s hypothesis, such that offender variables contributed significant unique variance above established predictors. Implications for the study of offender variables are discussed, as well as future directions research might consider.
author Carmody, Patrick C.
author_facet Carmody, Patrick C.
author_sort Carmody, Patrick C.
title Offender Variables: Unique Predictors of Benevolence, Avoidance, and Revenge?
title_short Offender Variables: Unique Predictors of Benevolence, Avoidance, and Revenge?
title_full Offender Variables: Unique Predictors of Benevolence, Avoidance, and Revenge?
title_fullStr Offender Variables: Unique Predictors of Benevolence, Avoidance, and Revenge?
title_full_unstemmed Offender Variables: Unique Predictors of Benevolence, Avoidance, and Revenge?
title_sort offender variables: unique predictors of benevolence, avoidance, and revenge?
publisher Trace: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange
publishDate 2010
url http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_gradthes/691
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