Publication | Closed Access
Two Spheres of Belief in Justice: Extensive Support for the Bidimensional Model of Belief in a Just World
227
Citations
82
References
2003
Year
Social PsychologyHigher Penal PunitivenessLawHuman ConditionBidimensional ModelSocial SciencesPsychologyPsychometric DistinctionExistentialismPersonal IdentityBidimensional ConceptualisationSocial IdentityExtensive SupportApplied Social PsychologySocial Identity TheoryLife SatisfactionEpistemic JusticeJust WorldJusticeInjusticeSocial JusticeGlobal Justice
The purpose of this research comprising five studies (N = 666) was to further corroborate the bidimensional conceptualisation of the belief in a just world proposed by Lipkus et al. (1996). It was demonstrated that belief in a just world for the Self (and not for Others) was correlated to evaluations of the meaning of life. Belief in a just world for Others was significantly correlated to discrimination against the elderly, stigmatisation of poverty, and higher penal punitiveness, while belief in a just world for Self was weakly or not related to these variables. Together, these observations confirm the importance of the conceptual and psychometric distinction between these two spheres of the belief in a just world.
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