The social production of altruism: motivations for caring action in a low-income urban community
- PMID: 19156513
- PMCID: PMC3049186
- DOI: 10.1007/s10464-008-9217-5
The social production of altruism: motivations for caring action in a low-income urban community
Abstract
Contemporary social science paints a bleak picture of inner-city relational life. Indeed, the relationships of low-income, urban-residing Americans are represented as rife with distress, violence and family disruption. At present, no body of social scientific work systematically examines the factors that promote loving or selfless interactions among low-income, inner-city American individuals, families and communities. In an effort to fill that gap, this ethnographic study examined the motivations for altruism among a sample of adults (n = 40) who reside in an economically distressed housing community (i.e., housing project) in New York City. Content analyses of interviews indicated that participants attributed altruism to an interplay between 14 motives that were then ordered into four overarching categories of motives: (1) needs-centered motives, (2) norm-based motives deriving from religious/spiritual ideology, relationships and personal factors, (3) abstract motives (e.g., humanism), and (4) sociopolitical factors. The implications of these findings are discussed.
References
-
- Amato P. Helping behavior in urban and rural environments: Field studies based on a taxonomic organization of helping episodes. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 1983;45:571–586.
-
- Atkins R, Hart D. Neighborhoods, adults, and the development of civic identity in urban youth. Applied Developmental Science. 2003;7:156–164.
-
- Baron L, Smolenska M. The Dutchness of Dutch rescuers: The national dimension of altruism. In: Oliner P, Oliner S, Baron L, Blum L, Krebs D, editors. Embracing the other: Philosophical, psychological and historical perspectives on altruism. New York University Press; New York: 1992. pp. 306–327.
-
- Batson C. The altruism question: Toward a social psychological answer. Lawrence Erlbaum; Hillsdale: 1991.
-
- Batson C. Why act for the public good? Four answers. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin. 1994;20:603–610.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
Miscellaneous
