Psychology of Justice and Legitimacy

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Government Apologies
Heritage Language
Heritage Language Development
Heritage Language Education
Heritage Language Program
Historical Injustices
Immanent Justice
institutional discrimination
intergroup relations
Interpersonal Apologies
Inuit Children
Iowa Netherlands Comparison Orientation Measure
justication
Minority Language Children
Model Penal Code
moral outrage
motives
Pay For Performance
Political Apologies
procedural
procedure
psychological responses to injustice
Punishment Decisions
Rule Adherence
SJT
social cognition
Social Comparison Orientation
status quo bias
system
System Justication Motives
system justification theory
System Threat
threat
Uncertainty Avoidance
van
Vice Versa
Victim Derogation

Product details

  • ISBN 9781848728783
  • Weight: 612g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Oct 2009
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In response to the international turmoil, violence, and increasing ideological polarization, social psychological interest in the topics of legitimacy and social justice has blossomed considerably. Social psychologists have explored the psychological underpinnings of people’s reactions to injustice and illegitimacy, including the behavioral and psychological consequences of the motivation to view individual outcomes and governmental systems as just and legitimate.

Although injustice and illegitimacy are clearly related at conceptual and theoretical levels, these two rich literatures are rarely integrated. Social justice researchers have focused on how people make sense of particular instances of injustice, whereas legitimacy researchers have tended to focus primarily on people’s reactions to unfair systems of intergroup relations.

This 11th volume of the Ontario Symposium series brings together the work of leading researchers in fields of social justice and legitimacy to facilitate the cross-pollination and integration of these fields. The contributions address broad theoretical issues and cutting-edge empirical advances, while illustrating the diversity and richness of research in the two fields. By uniting these two domains, this volume will stimulate new directions in theory and research that seek to explain how and why people make sense of injustice at all levels of analysis.

D. Ramona Bobocel, Aaron C. Kay, Mark P. Zanna, James M. Olson