Authors
Duane F Alwin, Galin Gornev, Ludmila Khakhulina, Vojko Antončič, Wil Arts, Bogdan Cichomski, Piet Hermkens
Publication date
2018/4/17
Book
Social justice and political change
Pages
109-130
Publisher
Routledge
Description
This chapter examines the implications of societal transformations, and consequent disruptions in system legitimacy for the social-psychological principles used in arriving at assessments of economic justice. Data from the International Social Justice Project (ISJP) are used to test several hypotheses, based on theories of justice evaluation, regarding the determinants of justice perceptions. Research findings show that people do evaluate income distributions in terms of notions of justice. Not only do they distinguish just from unjust allotments of income, they also distinguish degrees of injustice. In an effort to understand the patterns, the analyses reported explored the applicability of theories of justice evaluation to the understanding of national differences in perceived legitimacy. The chapter hypothesizes that level of perceived family need would play a role in shaping perceptions of job deserts, but a much stronger …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
DF Alwin, G Gornev, L Khakhulina, V Antončič, W Arts… - Social justice and political change, 2018