Publication | Open Access
Reconsidering the Role of Procedures for Decision Acceptance
196
Citations
59
References
2016
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingClinical Decision-makingIndividual Decision MakingPublic ChoiceProcedural Fairness TheorySocial SciencesPsychologyProgram EvaluationAuthoritative DecisionsBiasManagementFairness (Computer Systems)Decision TheoryPublic PolicyBehavioral SciencesDecision AidFairness (Language Acquisition)Algorithmic FairnessDecision AcceptanceDecision SciencePolitical ScienceProcedural Justice
Procedural fairness theory posits that the way in which authoritative decisions are made strongly impacts people’s willingness to accept them. This article challenges this claim by contending that democratic governments can achieve little in terms of acceptance of policy decisions by the procedural means at their disposal. Instead, outcome favorability is the dominant determinant of decision acceptance. The article explicates that while central parts of procedural fairness theory are true, outcome favorability is still overwhelmingly the strongest determinant of individuals’ willingness to accept authoritative decisions. It improves on previous research by locating all key variables into one causal model and testing this model using appropriate data. Findings from a large number of experiments (both vignette and field) reproduce the expected relationships from previous research and support the additional predictions.
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