Self-esteem and outcome fairness: differential importance of procedural and outcome considerations
- PMID: 11519646
- DOI: 10.1037/0021-9010.86.4.621
Self-esteem and outcome fairness: differential importance of procedural and outcome considerations
Abstract
Results of a survey of 222 detainees in Dutch jails and police stations showed that outcome-fairness judgments of individuals with high self-esteem were more strongly related to outcome considerations than to procedural considerations, whereas outcome-fairness judgments of individuals with low self-esteem were more strongly related to procedural considerations than to outcome considerations. It was proposed that these differences were due to the fact that (a) procedures more strongly express a social evaluation than outcomes and (b) individuals with low self-esteem are more concerned with social evaluations than individuals with high self-esteem. The implications of the results for other individual-differences factors and other populations than detainees are discussed.
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