Abstract

In the UK, knife crime continues to be a persistent and worrying concern. Media campaigns are often used by police and anti-knife crime organisations in an attempt to discourage young people from picking up a weapon. Many focus on the potentially devastating consequences associated with carrying a weapon, with the aim of provoking fear and thus a deterrent effect. In this paper, we present the findings from two experimental studies exploring the effects of exposure to fear-based knife crime media campaigns on young people's intentions to engage in knife-carrying behaviour. Utilising a terror management theory perspective, in both studies we found that exposure to knife-related campaign imagery increased mortality salience, but there was no effect of campaign condition on willingness to carry a knife or on perceived benefits of knife-carrying. Although knife-related self-esteem/cultural worldviews predicted attitudes towards knife-carrying, such views did not moderate the effect of exposure to knife-related campaign imagery, and there was no effect of priming participants' to consider the value of behaving responsibly. Implications and suggestions for future research are discussed.

Highlights

  • MethodsThe order of the tweets was randomised to control for order effects

  • Fear Appeals in Anti-Knife Carrying Campaigns: Successful or Counter-Productive? Knife crime is currently a significant issue in the UK: legally, politically, and sociall

  • Knife crime appears worryingly prevalent amongst young people, with 4,562 young people aged 10 to 17 years sentenced for carrying a knife or offensive weapon in England and Wales in the year ending September 2019

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Summary

Methods

The order of the tweets was randomised to control for order effects. After viewing all four tweets, participants were randomly allocated to one of three message prime conditions. 2) Primed responsibility – “carrying a knife can have devastating consequences on your friends and family – no parent or grandparent would ever want to see their child get injured or be killed”. A simple filler task provided a short delay to remove the knife imagery from respondents’ focal attention. As a manipulation check to test that mortality was salient after the campaign imagery (and to answer H1), participants completed an ‘accessibility to death’ (Weber et al, 2015) related concepts task (see below)

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