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People will intervene if they see someone being beaten up, CCTV study suggests

Research gives lie to conventional wisdom that 'non-involvement is the default response', author says

Jon Sharman
Wednesday 26 June 2019 02:10 EDT
CCTV images showing a woman intervening in a city-centre fight
CCTV images showing a woman intervening in a city-centre fight (Lancaster University)

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People are more likely to intervene when they see someone being menaced or attacked in the street than to walk on by, a study has suggested.

Researchers examining CCTV footage of assaults and arguments from three countries found that in nine of 10 cases, passers-by offered help.

They analysed 219 video clips from Lancaster, Amsterdam and Cape Town and found that the more people were around during an altercation, the more likely it was that someone would step in.

“According to conventional wisdom, non-involvement is the default response of bystanders during public emergencies”, said the study's lead author Dr Richard Philpott of Lancaster University and the University of Copenhagen.

People are given to ask, therefore, “Will I receive help if needed?” he added.

“Challenging this view, the current cross-national study of video data shows that intervention is the norm in actual aggressive conflicts," he said. “The fact that bystanders are much more active than we think is a positive and reassuring story for potential victims of violence and the public as a whole.

“We need to develop crime prevention efforts which build on the willingness of bystanders to intervene.”

The help offered included gesturing for an attacker to calm down, physically blocking an aggressor or pulling them away, and consoling their victim.

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There was no difference in the rates of intervention between the three cities, scientists found.

Dr Philpott added: “While having more people around may reduce an individual’s likelihood of helping - the bystander effect - it also provides a larger pool from which help-givers may be sourced.”

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