The irony of fairness: How procedural fairness climate perceptions can hinder disadvantaged group members’ support for social change

Author:

Dierckx Kim1ORCID,van Hiel Alain1,Swart Hermann2,Valcke Barbara1

Affiliation:

1. Ghent University, Belgium

2. Stellenbosch University, South Africa

Abstract

The current research investigated an “ironic” consequence of a perceived procedural fairness climate vis-à-vis disadvantaged groups. Specifically, we examined whether the perception that societal institutions treat one’s underprivileged group in a procedurally fair way negatively impacts upon minority group members’ support for social change. Six studies (total N = 1,076) supported our claims. In survey Study 1 (Belgian ethnic minorities), procedural fairness climate perceptions were negatively related to support for social change. Cross-sectional Studies 2 (colored South Africans) and 3 (Hispanic Americans) further showed that this relationship is mediated by beliefs in minority mobility. Finally, Studies 4–6 (Asian and African Americans) provided experimental evidence corroborating our causal mediation model. Our findings align with literature demonstrating similar “ironic” effects of procedural fairness among advantaged group members, as they illustrate that the perception of a procedural fairness climate can analogously prevent disadvantaged group members from advocating changes that could alleviate their state of deprivation.

Funder

Bijzonder Onderzoeksfonds

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sociology and Political Science,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Communication,Cultural Studies,Social Psychology

Reference77 articles.

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4. Bullock J. G., Green D. P., Ha S. E. (2008). Experimental approaches to mediation: A new guide for assessing causal pathways [Unpublished manuscript]. Department of Political Science, Yale University.

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