Does crossing a moral line justify collective means? Explaining how a perceived moral violation triggers normative and nonnormative forms of collective action

Inga L. Pauls*, Eric Shuman, Martijn van Zomeren, Tamar Saguy, Eran Halperin

*Corresponding author voor dit werk

OnderzoeksoutputAcademicpeer review

20 Citaten (Scopus)
166 Downloads (Pure)

Samenvatting

In three studies conducted in the United States, we examined whether a perceived moral violation motivates willingness to engage in normative and more radical collective action. Using value-protection and identity-formation models, we explored whether increased endorsement of moral convictions and relevant opinion-based group identification could explain such effects. Study 1, using the “travel ban” for Muslims as the focal issue, experimentally found that a strong violation, compared to a weak violation, increased normative and nonnormative collective action, moral convictions and opinion-based group identification. Study 2 replicated these results in a longitudinal design and supported a mediating effect of increased endorsement of moral convictions and opinion-based group identity. Study 3 used a real-world violation (the United States’ withdrawal from the Paris climate agreements) to replicate the findings cross-sectionally. We conclude that a perceived moral violation motivates normative and nonnormative collective action because the violation makes one's moral conviction and opinion-based group identification more salient.

Originele taal-2English
Pagina's (van-tot)105-123
Aantal pagina's19
TijdschriftEuropean Journal of Social Psychology
Volume52
Nummer van het tijdschrift1
DOI's
StatusPublished - feb.-2022

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