Friday, February 1, 2013

Victims and Offenders: One Event—Two Worlds


How can it be that two people will tell such different stories about an offense?  Part of the difference resides in the roles of “victim” and “offender.”  Tavris and Aronson describe it this way.

“When we construct narratives that ‘make sense,’ however, we do so in a self-serving way.  Perpetrators are motivated to reduce their moral culpability; victims are motivated to maximize their moral blamelessness.  Depending on which side of the wall we are on, we systematically distort our memories and account of the event to produce the maximum consonance between what happened and how we see ourselves.” (Tavris, 2007, p. 193)

They refer to a research report presented by Roy Baumeister and colleagues in 1990.  The data presented came from coding victim and offender stories for analysis.  The novel part of the study arose from the fact that these stories came from the same people rather than from separate groups of victims and offenders.  This matters because we can see from the data that victims are not inherently “good people” and offenders are not inherently “bad people.” 

Baumeister and company make the point this way.  “The motivations and biases [that account for differences in victim and offender stories] thus may be considered inherent in the roles.  In other words, our results do not indicate that victims and perpetrators are different kinds of people; rather, the same people see things differently depending on whether they participate as victims or perpetrators.  The biases are in the roles.” (Baumeister, 1990, p. 1000).

How do victims tell their grievance story?  Here is a brief summary of the results.  Victims
·        Tend to describe offense as incomprehensible and senseless: “To the victim, the transgression tends to appear as a random, inexplicable provocation, done for no apparent reason or out of sheer malice” (Baumeister, 1990, p. 1002).
  •         Are more likely to describe offense as the last in a series of related offenses
  •         Are more likely to describe negative outcomes or consequences
  •         Are more likely to describe “lasting negative consequences, continuing anger, and long-term relationship damage…” (Baumeister, 1990)
  •         Are unlikely to report expressions of regret and/or apologies by offender
  •         Are unlikely to have a positive outcome or happy ending
  •         Tend to place the event in a longer time frame and describe event as part of an ongoing experience of loss and grievance
  •         Rarely regard their own responses as excessive

Victims experience the offense as random, largely negative, and long-lasting in effects.  They experience their responses as measured, reasonable and justified.  In my experience as a mediator and conflict-resolution consultant, those who support the victims (parents, spouses, children, friends, advocates) tend to adopt the same story-telling perspective as the victims themselves.

How do offenders tell their perpetrator story?  Here is a brief summary of those results as well.  Offenders
  •         Tend to describe circumstances, motives and reasons that render the offense understandable and meaningful
  •         Are more likely to describe offense as a single and isolated incident
  •         Are more likely to deny negative outcomes or consequences
  •         Are more likely to report expressions of regret and/or apologies
  •         Are more likely to have a positive outcome or happy ending
  •         Tend to describe event as one-time and limited in duration and impact
  •         Are ready to bring early closure to the incident, to forget it and to move on as quickly as possible
  •         Sometimes regard victim responses as over-reactions and as excessively vindictive
  •         May tell their perpetrator story in such a way as to portray themselves as victims as well.

Offenders experience the offense as rooted in a context, often having a happy ending, and bracketed in duration and impact.  They often experience the responses of the victim as excessive, unreasonable and vindictive. Those who support the offenders (parents, spouses, children, friends, advocates) tend to adopt the same story-telling perspective as the offenders themselves.

In a psychological framework, victims and offenders inhabit different worlds.  These worlds are determined to a significant degree by the roles themselves.  “People define themselves in the stories from their lives,” Baumeister and his colleagues write, “and the stories they tell differ systematically depending on their roles as victims and perpetrators.  Identity is made from roles, and it is the roles that contain the biases that accounted for our findings, because our data were based on the same people in both roles” (Baumeister, 1990, p. 1004).

In addition, these residents of different worlds tend not to see the radically different narrative frameworks imposed on their stories by these roles.  “Victims and perpetrators may understand things differently, but they do not seem to acknowledge that they understand them differently” (Baumeister, 1990, p. 1000).  In my work as a mediator, I have the opportunity and the responsibility to bridge the gap between these two perceptual worlds.  That requires first of all an understanding what each party needs.  Deborah Brownyard and Dawn Swanson identify those varying needs.

What do victims need? (Brownyard, 2002, p. 2.4)
  •         Safety and security
  •         Ventilation and validation
  •         Prediction and preparation
  •         Education and information

 What do offenders need? (Brownyard, 2002, p. 3.4)
  •         To be held accountable
  •         To be responsible
  •         To see the real human costs of their actions
  •         To be given the opportunity to make things right
  •         To gain a sense of competency

As those basic needs are addressed, the opportunity to bridge the gap between worlds is created.  This is the genius of victim/offender dialogue as a mediation tool.  In that process, each party tells the story to the other, with the victim going first.  The bridge that is built when this process is successful is the bridge of empathy.  Each party enters the story of the other.  That is where the healing happens.

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