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Helping: Kitty Genovese and the Bystander Effect

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  • About
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About the lecture

In this lecture, we think about early social psychological research into helping behaviour, focusing in particular on: (i) the case of Kitty Genovese, a murder case from 1960s New York in which a young woman was attacked while a large number of onlookers allegedly failed to help or intervene; (ii) the fact that, although the accuracy of this account has been questioned in later research by Manning, Levine and Collins (2007), the case nevertheless had an important influence on contemporary research into helping behaviour and famously inspired Darley and Latané’s study The Unresponsive Bystander (1970); (iii) the two key models to have come out of their research being the Decision Model of Helping and the Bystander Effect; (iv) how these models can help us to question the traditional view of non-helpers as callous or uncaring.

About the lecturer

Dr Juliet Wakefield is a senior lecturer in the Department of Psychology at Nottingham Trent University. Dr Wakefield is a member of the Groups, Identities, and Health research group and has research interests in the social identity approach and implications of group membership. Some of Dr Wakefield’s recent publications include ‘Communities as conduits of harm: a social identity analysis of appraisal, coping and justice-seeking in response to historic collective victimisation’ (2022) and ‘The link between family identification, loneliness, and symptom severity in people with eating disorders’ (2022).

Cite this Lecture

APA style

Wakefield, J. (2020, March 23). Latané & Darley (1969) - Helping: Kitty Genovese and the Bystander Effect [Video]. MASSOLIT. https://massolit.io/options/latane-darley-1969?auth=0&lesson=3056&option=16706&type=lesson

MLA style

Wakefield, J. "Latané & Darley (1969) – Helping: Kitty Genovese and the Bystander Effect." MASSOLIT, uploaded by MASSOLIT, 23 Mar 2020, https://massolit.io/options/latane-darley-1969?auth=0&lesson=3056&option=16706&type=lesson