Unveiling Bias: The Impact of Male Rape Myths and Stereotypes on Juror Verdicts in Male‐on‐Male Rape Trials
Unveiling Bias: The Impact of Male Rape Myths and Stereotypes on Juror Verdicts in Male‐on‐Male Rape Trials
StatusVoR
Alternative title
Authors
Curley, Lee J.
Widanaralalage, B. Kennath
Willmott, Dominic
Ermenkova, Joanna
Monograph
Monograph (alternative title)
Date
2026-06-08
Publisher
Journal title
Behavioral Sciences and the Law
Issue
3
Volume
44
Pages
Pages
407–424
ISSN
0735-3936
ISSN of series
Access date
2026-06-08
Abstract PL
Abstract EN
This study examined how male rape myths, racial/ethnicity biases, and sexuality stereotypes influence verdicts in male-on-male rape trials—an area that is currently under-researched. A sample of 463 participants read a mock rape trial, where both the defendant and complainant were male, with defendant ethnicity (White, Black, Asian) and complainant sexuality (homosexual, heterosexual) manipulated across conditions. Participants completed the Male Rape Myth Acceptance Scale (MRMAS) before the trial and the Juror Decision Scale (JDS) afterwards. Results showed that defendant and complainant believability (subscales of the JDS) mediated the relationship between rape myth acceptance and verdicts, indicating that pre-trial biases shape jurors' story formation and verdict-making. Qualitative data demonstrates divergent narrative logics between high and low MRMA participants. Further, it was also found that both defendant ethnicity and complainant sexuality did not significantly influence verdicts. Findings highlight how underlying biases affect juror judgements and underscore the implications of this research are considered in the context of jury-reform initiatives already underway across the UK. Limitations and future research discussed within.
Abstract other
Keywords PL
Keywords EN
juror decision‐making
male rape myths
racial bias
racial biases
sexuality stereotypes
story model
male rape myths
racial bias
racial biases
sexuality stereotypes
story model