矛盾的性别歧视预示着以色列人在加沙人质危机中的性别偏好。

Orly Bareket, Michal Reifen-Tagar, Tamar Saguy
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引用次数: 0

摘要

长期以来,从自然灾害到战时疏散,在生死决定中基于性别的优先次序一直影响着危机应对。​在两次人质释放交易中——一次是在2023年11月,另一次是在2025年1月——女性被系统地优先释放,而被绑架的男性被囚禁。对2023年11月协议中具有代表性的以色列犹太人样本(N = 1171)的分析显示,以对女性的怨恨为特征的敌意性别歧视预示着反对优先释放女性。相反,善意的性别歧视,将女性视为需要保护,预示着对女性(尤其是母亲)优先考虑的支持。即使在考虑了人口统计和更广泛的意识形态之后,性别歧视态度仍然是公众舆论中基于性别的偏好的关键预测因素。敌意和善意的性别歧视在很大程度上是独立运作的,没有可信的证据表明两者之间存在相互作用,这表明存在不同的心理途径。被访者的性别起着次要作用,尽管善意的性别歧视预示着男性对女性人质的保护倾向比女性更强。这些发现强调了敌意的性别歧视如何使女性处于不利地位,而善意的性别歧视可以增强女性的脆弱性,但需要男性做出牺牲。尽管关于释放人质的决定表面上看起来纯粹是实用主义的,但公众对此事的不同看法可能反映了在高风险、生死攸关的情况下出现的性别偏见——可能比公正、基于需求的考虑更重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Ambivalent sexism predicts Israelis' gendered preferences in the Gaza hostage crisis.

Ambivalent sexism predicts Israelis' gendered preferences in the Gaza hostage crisis.

Ambivalent sexism predicts Israelis' gendered preferences in the Gaza hostage crisis.

Ambivalent sexism predicts Israelis' gendered preferences in the Gaza hostage crisis.

Gender-based prioritization in life-or-death decisions has long shaped crisis responses, from natural disasters to wartime evacuations. This study examined psychological predictors of public support for such prioritization, using the case of Israeli hostages abducted by Hamas terrorist organization on October 7, 2023. Across two hostage release deals-one in November 2023 and another in January 2025-women were systematically prioritized, leaving abducted men in captivity. Analyses of a representative Jewish Israeli sample (N = 1171) regarding the November 2023 deal, reveal that hostile sexism, marked by resentment toward women, predicts opposition to prioritizing women's release. Conversely, benevolent sexism, casting women as needing protection, predicts support for women's prioritization (particularly for mothers). Even after accounting for demographics and broader ideologies, sexist attitudes emerge as key predictors of gender-based preferences in public opinion. Hostile and benevolent sexism operate here largely independently, with no credible evidence for an interaction, suggesting distinct psychological pathways. Respondent's gender plays a minor role, though benevolent sexism predicts a stronger protective bias toward women hostages among men than among women. These findings underscore how hostile sexism can disadvantage women, while benevolent sexism can reinforce women's vulnerability but demands men's sacrifice. Although decisions about hostage release may appear purely pragmatic on the surface, divergent public views on the matter may reflect gendered biases that emerge in high-stakes, life-or-death contexts-potentially more than impartial, need-based considerations.

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