RT Article T1 Legitimizing Intimate Partner Violence: Moral Evaluations, Attribution of Responsibility, and (Reduced) Helping Intentions JF Journal of interpersonal violence VO 36 IS 5/6 SP 2929 OP 2941 A1 Pagliaro, Stefano A2 Pacilli, Maria Giuseppina A2 Giannella, Valeria Amata A2 Giovannelli, Ilaria A2 Spaccatini, Federica A2 Baldry, Anna Costanza 1970- LA English YR 2021 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1750720981 AB This article examines the influence of moral evaluations and attribution of responsibility on individuals’ willingness to provide help if witnessing an intimate partner violence (IPV) episode. A total of 121 undergraduates read a fictitious article from a newspaper, allegedly describing an IPV episode. According to the experimental condition, participants read that the victim had either admitted infidelity or denied it. After reading the newspaper article, participants evaluated the victim on several dimensions (i.e., morality, competence, and sociability), rated the extent to which they deemed her responsible for the violence (i.e., the internal attribution of what happened), and expressed their willingness to provide help and support to the victim herself. In the admission condition, the victim was evaluated as less moral and more responsible for the episode of IPV. These evaluations, in turn, lowered the willingness to provide help to the victim. This study confirmed the role of moral evaluations and internal attribution on bystanders’ reaction, and we present practical implications for intervention in a field, IPV, in constant need of updated validated evidence for efficient prevention strategies. K1 bystanders’ intervention K1 attribution of responsibility K1 moral evaluations K1 Intimate Partner Violence DO 10.1177/0886260518760611