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Título
Construction and Validation of a Scale to Assess Social Judgments Toward Sex Work from the Stereotype Content Model
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Sex work
Stereotype
Content model
Attitudes
Validation
Clasificación UNESCO
6112 Estudio Psicológico de Temas Sociales
6105.01 Psicología Diferencial
6105 Evaluación y Diagnostico en Psicología
Fecha de publicación
2024-04-08
Editor
Taylor & Francis
Citación
Jenaro, C., Flores Robaina, N., Sánchez Gil, L. M., Torres Apolo, V. A., & Arias, V. B. (2024). Construction and Validation of a Scale to Assess Social Judgments Toward Sex Work from the Stereotype Content Model. The Journal of Sex Research, 1–15. https://doi.org/10.1080/00224499.2024.2332932
Resumen
[EN] Sex workers (SW) are subject to social judgment and the associated attitudes, ranging from admiration to contempt. The presence of stereotypical attitudes towards SW is common and can be analyzed using the Stereotype Content Model (SCM), where the concepts of warmth and competence play a central role. The interweaving of both dimensions allows the identification of four emotions and corresponding political positions towards SW: admiration (non-interventionism), pity (abolitionism), contempt (prohibitionism), and fear (regulationism). From the SCM framework, this study offers the construction, validation and performance of a 25-item scale with a snowball sample of 1,543 participants residing in Spanish-speaking countries. The four-factor hypothesized model yielded adequate values. Internal consistency was sufficient on all factors, as was model-based reliability and convergent validity. The scale also showed measurement invariance between gender and age groups, suggesting that the measure is interpreted in a conceptually similar manner by respondents representing different genders or ages. Further analysis revealed that male participants scored significantly higher on admiration. Baby boomers showed less pity and contempt while Millennials showed more fear and less admiration. SW and those who know or work with SW showed less fear and pity and more admiration. The SCM and the process of developing social judgments offer us a way to understand the differences that underlie irreconcilable policy positions. Overcoming these differences requires mutual understanding from scientific frameworks instead of from ideological perspectives.
URI
ISSN
1559-8519
DOI
10.1080/00224499.2024.2332932
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