Justice Sensitivity¶
Short Description: Individuals differ systematically in how readily they perceive situations to be unjust and how strongly they react to subjective injustice – cognitively, emotionally, and behaviorally. Justice sensitivity from the perspectives of a victim, observer, beneficiary, and perpetrator can be measured reliably with two items per perspective.
Methodological Details: Eight self-report items. Examples include “It makes me angry when others are undeservingly better off than me.” and “It bothers me when things come easily to me that others have to work hard for.”
Available Papers
Stavrova, Olga, Thomas Schlösser, and Anna Baumert. 2014. Life Satisfaction and Job-Seeking Behavior of the Unemployed: The Effect of Individual Differences in Justice Sensitivity. Applied Psychology 63 (4), 643-670. (https://doi.org/10.1111/apps.12009)
Find the proposal for the module here
Contact |
Syear |
Respondents |
Dataset |
Variables |
Availability |
Field |
Method |
Replication |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Thomas Schlösser (University of Cologne), Anna Baumert (Max Planck Institute for Research on Collective Goods) |
2017 |
~1474 |
inno |
ivornac02, ivornac01, im_js, ivornaa01, ivornad01, ivornab01, ivornad02, ivornaa02, ivornab02 |
04/2020 |
Sociology |
Survey items |
2011,2014 |