Group belongingness and procedural justice: social inclusion and exclusion by peers affects the psychology of voice

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
Jan-Willem van ProoijenH A Wilke

Abstract

The authors focus on the relation between group membership and procedural justice. They argue that whether people are socially included or excluded by their peers influences their reactions to unrelated experiences of procedural justice. Findings from 2 experiments corroborate the prediction that reactions to voice as opposed to no-voice procedures are affected more strongly when people are included in a group than when they are excluded from a group. These findings are extended with a 3rd experiment that shows that people who generally experience higher levels of inclusion in their lives respond more strongly to voice as opposed to no-voice procedures. It is concluded that people's reactions to procedural justice are moderated by people's level of inclusion in social groups.

References

Sep 27, 1974·Nature·D Deutsch
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Citations

Jun 26, 2007·The British Journal of Social Psychology·Jan-Willem van ProoijenGaby Toeset
Dec 8, 2016·Scandinavian Journal of Psychology·Beatrice PiccoliWilliam D Reisel
May 2, 2006·Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin·Jan-Willem van Prooijen
Jun 30, 2004·Personality and Social Psychology Review : an Official Journal of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Inc·John M Levine, Richard L Moreland
May 13, 2020·International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health·Yashuo ChenChunjiang Yang
Oct 23, 2020·Journal of Research on Adolescence : the Official Journal of the Society for Research on Adolescence·Angela CostabileRosa Scardigno

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