In this new series, the Death Penalty Information Center will occa­sion­al­ly high­light stu­dent works on cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, includ­ing master’s and PhD the­ses, and law review articles.

University of Alabama master’s degree can­di­date Christine Poole’s 2024 the­sis explores the use of moral dis­en­gage­ment the­o­ry in jus­ti­fy­ing sup­port for cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. Using online sur­veys, she eval­u­at­ed par­tic­i­pants’ knowl­edge of the death penal­ty, sup­port for the death penal­ty, and their use of moral dis­en­gage­ment tech­niques in approach­ing the issue. 

Moral dis­en­gage­ment is a pre­emp­tive cog­ni­tive process that jus­ti­fies social­ly unac­cept­able behav­ior and reduces the asso­ci­at­ed guilt,” Ms. Poole explains. Her study found that many sup­port­ers of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment dis­tanced them­selves eth­i­cal­ly and moral­ly from death row pris­on­ers and used three ele­ments of moral dis­en­gage­ment the­o­ry – euphemistic label­ing, advan­ta­geous com­par­i­son, and dehu­man­iza­tion – to jus­ti­fy their views on the death penal­ty. Euphemistic label­ing is when lan­guage is san­i­tized to avoid the harsh real­i­ties of the action,” she wrote, and advan­ta­geous com­par­i­son is where indi­vid­u­als com­pare their behav­iors to those who have com­mit­ted worse actions to appear more acceptable.” 

For exam­ple, euphemistic label­ing might use cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment” or jus­tice being served” instead of exe­cu­tion”; advan­ta­geous com­par­i­son might con­trast the method of lethal injec­tion with graph­ic details of crimes com­mit­ted; and dehu­man­iza­tion is used to char­ac­ter­ize death row pris­on­ers as mon­sters’ or ani­mals’. Ms. Poole found that 66.7% of sup­port­ers of the death penal­ty among the study par­tic­i­pants adopt­ed a mech­a­nis­tic tone of dehu­man­iza­tion (p.31) — deny­ing indi­vid­u­als warmth, agency, emo­tion­al­i­ty, and the cog­ni­tive capac­i­ty for depth” (p.6).

Ms. Poole’s meth­ods and find­ings present a new approach to under­stand­ing how opin­ions on cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment are shaped and defended. 

Citation Guide
Sources

Christine N. Poole, Moral Disengagement and Its Influence on Public Perception of the Death Penalty, Master’s Thesis, University of Alabama, 2024.

Photo by Namito Yokota, sourced from Unsplash​.com. Location: University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL.