What Is (Un)fair? Political Ideology and Collective Action

The established models predicting collective action have been developed based on liberal ideas of injustice perceptions showing that progressive collective action occurs when people perceive that the equality or need rule of fairness are violated. We argue, however, that these perceptions of injusti...

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Main Authors: Gosia Mikołajczak, Julia C. Becker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PsychOpen 2019-10-01
Series:Journal of Social and Political Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jspp.psychopen.eu/article/view/1230
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spelling doaj-b6d23d97a5ed4bcb84273ee0b639aa4b2020-11-25T03:10:45ZengPsychOpenJournal of Social and Political Psychology2195-33252019-10-017281082910.5964/jspp.v7i2.1230jspp.v7i2.1230What Is (Un)fair? Political Ideology and Collective ActionGosia Mikołajczak0Julia C. Becker1School of Social and Political Sciences, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, AustraliaDepartment of Psychology, University of Osnabrück, Osnabrück, GermanyThe established models predicting collective action have been developed based on liberal ideas of injustice perceptions showing that progressive collective action occurs when people perceive that the equality or need rule of fairness are violated. We argue, however, that these perceptions of injustice cannot explain the occurrence of social protests among Conservatives. The present work addresses one shortcoming in collective action research by exploring the interactive role of political ideology and injustice appraisals in predicting social protest. Specifically, we focused on injustice appraisals as a key predictor of collective action and tested whether the same or different conceptualizations of injustice instigate protest among Liberals versus Conservatives using data from two studies conducted in Germany (Study 1, N = 130) and in the US (Study 2, N = 115). Our findings indicate that injustice appraisals play an equally important role in instigating social protest both among Liberals and Conservatives. As we show, however, predicting collective action among individuals across the political spectrum requires accounting for ideological preferences for different fairness rules. Whereas Liberals are more likely to engage in protest when the equality and need rules are violated, Conservatives are more likely to protest when the merit rule is violated. We recommend that studies on collective action consider not only the strength of injustice appraisals but also their content, to assess which fairness principles guide one’s perceptions of (in)justice.http://jspp.psychopen.eu/article/view/1230collective actionpolitical ideologyprotest behaviourrules of fairnesssocial justice
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gosia Mikołajczak
Julia C. Becker
spellingShingle Gosia Mikołajczak
Julia C. Becker
What Is (Un)fair? Political Ideology and Collective Action
Journal of Social and Political Psychology
collective action
political ideology
protest behaviour
rules of fairness
social justice
author_facet Gosia Mikołajczak
Julia C. Becker
author_sort Gosia Mikołajczak
title What Is (Un)fair? Political Ideology and Collective Action
title_short What Is (Un)fair? Political Ideology and Collective Action
title_full What Is (Un)fair? Political Ideology and Collective Action
title_fullStr What Is (Un)fair? Political Ideology and Collective Action
title_full_unstemmed What Is (Un)fair? Political Ideology and Collective Action
title_sort what is (un)fair? political ideology and collective action
publisher PsychOpen
series Journal of Social and Political Psychology
issn 2195-3325
publishDate 2019-10-01
description The established models predicting collective action have been developed based on liberal ideas of injustice perceptions showing that progressive collective action occurs when people perceive that the equality or need rule of fairness are violated. We argue, however, that these perceptions of injustice cannot explain the occurrence of social protests among Conservatives. The present work addresses one shortcoming in collective action research by exploring the interactive role of political ideology and injustice appraisals in predicting social protest. Specifically, we focused on injustice appraisals as a key predictor of collective action and tested whether the same or different conceptualizations of injustice instigate protest among Liberals versus Conservatives using data from two studies conducted in Germany (Study 1, N = 130) and in the US (Study 2, N = 115). Our findings indicate that injustice appraisals play an equally important role in instigating social protest both among Liberals and Conservatives. As we show, however, predicting collective action among individuals across the political spectrum requires accounting for ideological preferences for different fairness rules. Whereas Liberals are more likely to engage in protest when the equality and need rules are violated, Conservatives are more likely to protest when the merit rule is violated. We recommend that studies on collective action consider not only the strength of injustice appraisals but also their content, to assess which fairness principles guide one’s perceptions of (in)justice.
topic collective action
political ideology
protest behaviour
rules of fairness
social justice
url http://jspp.psychopen.eu/article/view/1230
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