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Offender Empathy: Where we are now, and where we could go next. Benjamin Cuff. Aims. To give an overview of current practice (from a research point of view) To present a new line of research that may be useful in offender empathy interventions
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Offender Empathy: Where we are now, and where we could go next Benjamin Cuff
Aims • To give an overview of current practice (from a research point of view) • To present a new line of research that may be useful in offender empathy interventions • To present preliminary data for the influence of person specific, cognitive antecedents of empathy
Empathy and Offender Intervention • Seems obvious to many that offenders lack empathy, and that this deficit must be addressed. • Introduced into SOTPs in the 1970s. • Rapidly grew in prevalence, despite the lack of empirical support. • Research began in the 1990s (Marshall et al., 1995) • Contained in 87-95% of US SOTPs (McGrath et al., 2010). • 1/5th of time spent of empathy in England & Wales SOTPs (Mann & Barnett, 2012).
Programme Effectiveness • Mixed results (Brown et al., 2013) • Most programmes have multiple components, and it is unclear which are the most successful (Marshall & Serran, 2000) • Theoretical Issues • General Deficits: • “The evidence demonstrating that sex offenders have empathy deficits…is at best equivocal” (Brown et al., 2013) • Victim Work: • There is no empirical evidence for the notion that developing empathy for past victims generalizes to future situations (Barnett & Mann, 2013a)
Where we are • Generalised treatments are likely inappropriate. • (With the possible exception of psychopaths.) • Victim empathy work needs a greater empirical base. • “Victim empathy work with sexual offenders is inconsistently articulated, poorly understood, and largely untested empirically” Mann & Barnett (2012, p.295) • A need to go back to basics in terms of our theoretical understanding of these issues.
Where we could go next • Examine the multiple reasons why these deficits arise, rather than target the empathy deficits themselves (Barnett & Mann, 2013a). • Suggested in the victim-specific deficits literature (Marshall & Colleagues) • Marshall et al., (1995, p.109) • “We believe that researchers should … develop more person-specific measures that may reveal inabilities to empathize with their victims rather than a generalized lack of empathy.” (Marshall et al., 1995) • These inabilities may result from cognitions (attitudes, justifications, denial, minimisation etc.) (Brown et al., 2013), and these cognitions should form the key targets for assessment and treatment (Barnett & Mann, 2013a).
Cognitive Distortions • Sex offender implicit theories (Polaschek & Ward, 2002): • Women as Unknowable • Women are sex objects • Male sex drive is uncontrollable • Entitlement • Dangerous world • CDs can interrupt empathic responding (Ward, Polaschek, & Beech, 2005) • Some evidence for effectiveness of CD interventions (Watson and Stermac, 1994) • However: • Specific to offending • Persistently held
Literature Review • 9 person specific cognitions that have an influence on empathy:
Scale Development • “The Cognitive Antecedents of Empathic Responding Scale” • 11 subscales (9 cognitions + empathy & sympathy) • 177 undergraduate students • Good internal reliability • α = .71-.90 • Good correlations with IRI (concurrent validity)
Cuff, Brown, Taylor, Howat, & Sleath (under review) **p < 0.01
Differential Effects? – Donating to Charity • Certain cognitions seem to be particularly important for donation behaviours: • Agency • Valuing • Morality • Blame (-) • More research is required to establish those cognitions which have the greatest impact on offending behaviour • (both causative and preventative) Cuffet al. (in preparation)
Individualised Treatments • Understanding how offenders see their victims as being “different” may lead to person-specific treatment approaches. • Treatments should target each individual’s specific blocks to empathy (Barnett & Mann, 2013a). • Personalizing the victim in a way that is relevant to the offender (Marshall & Marshall, 2011) • Find cognitive deficits (e.g., similarity) and target those (e.g., find a way to make the victim seem more ‘similar’).
Should we include these in treatment programmes? • Mann & Barnett (2012, p.287) • “Although (specific) victim empathy deficits may be observable in [offenders], this alone does not constitute an argument to address them in treatment, unless these deficits also predict recidivism, or if there is evidence that addressing them reduces recidivism.” • More Research Is Needed!!
Conclusions • Mixed support for current intervention approaches • It may be fruitful to look at the antecedents of empathy, rather than empathy itself. • More research into context specific cognitions is needed • Interventions could target individual risk factors.
References • Barnett, G., & Mann, R. E. (2013a). Empathy deficits and sexual offending: A model of obstacles to empathy. Aggression and Violent Behavior, • Brown, S.J., Walker, K., Gannon, T.A., & Keown, K. (2013). Creating a psychologically comfortable position: The link between empathy and cognitions in sex offenders. Journal of Sexual Aggression, 19, 275-294 • Cuff, Brown, Taylor, Howat, & Sleath (under review). The Cognitive Antecedents of Empathic Responding Scale. Psychological Assessment. • Cuff, Brown, Taylor, Howat, & Sleath (in preparation). Cognitions, empathy, and charitable donations. • Hanson, R. K. (2003). Empathy deficits of sexual offenders: A conceptual model. Journal of Sexual Aggression, 9, 13-23. • Marshall, L.E., & Marshall, W.L. (2011). Empathy and antisocial behaviour. Journal of Forensic Psychiatry & Psychology, 22, 742-759. • Marshall & Serran, 2000 • Marshall, W. L., Hudson, S. M., Jones, R., & Fernandez, Y. M. (1995). Empathy in sex offenders. Clinical Psychology Review, 15, 99-113. • McGrath et al., 2010 • Mann, R.E., & Barnett, G.D. (2012). Victim empathy intervention with sexual offenders: Rehabilitation, punishment, or correctional quackery? Sex Abuse, • Polaschek, D., & Ward, T. (2002). The implicit theories of potential rapists: What our questionnaires tell us. Aggression & Violent Behaviour, 7, 385-406. • Ward, T., Polaschek, D., & Beech, A. (2005). Theories of Sexual Offending. Chichester: Wiley. • Watson, R. J., & Stermac, L. E. (1994). Cognitive group counseling for sexual offenders. International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology, 38, 259–269.
Any Questions? ab5676@coventry.ac.uk