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Chapter 10 No Child Left Alone: Moral Judgments About Parents Affect Estimates of Risk to Children

From the book How Science Engages with Ethics and Why It Should

  • Ashley J. Thomas , P. Kyle Stanford and Barbara W. Sarnecka

Abstract

In recent decades, Americans have adopted a parenting norm in which every child is expected to be under constant direct adult supervision. Parents who violate this norm by allowing their children to be alone, even for short periods of time, often face harsh criticism and even legal action. This is true despite the fact that children are much more likely to be hurt, for example, in car accidents. Why then do bystanders call 911 when they see children playing in parks, but not when they see children riding in cars? Here, we present results from six studies indicating that moral judgments play a role: The less morally acceptable a parent’s reason for leaving a child alone, the more danger people think the child is in. This suggests that people’s estimates of danger to unsupervised children are affected by an intuition that parents who leave their children alone have done something morally wrong.

© 2024 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
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