The development of distributive justice orientations: contextual influences on children's resource allocations.

Previous research on the development of distributive justice decisions, by centering largely on situations in which rewards for work productivity are to be allocated, has shed little light on the child's developing ability to select the justice norm most appropriate to the situation. Children 5, 9, and 13 years of age were asked to allocate resources and judge the fairness of alternative decision rules in situations to which either equity, equality, or need norms were especially applicable. As predicted, young children were insensitive to contextual information, generally preferring to allocate resources equally, whereas older children tailored their decisions appropriately to the situation. The fact that developmental trends differed from situation to situation points to the importance of adopting a contextual perspective on the development of distributive justice orientations.

[1]  M. Lerner,et al.  The Justice Motive: "Equity" and "Parity" among Children. , 1974 .

[2]  W. Damon Early Conceptions of Positive Justice as Related to the Development of Logical Operations. , 1975 .

[3]  C. Dweck,et al.  Motivation and Competence as Determinants of Young Children's Reward Allocation. , 1977 .

[4]  William Damon,et al.  The social world of the child , 1977 .

[5]  N. Anderson,et al.  Integration Theory Applied to Children's Judgments of Equity. , 1978 .

[6]  Anthony B. Olejnik,et al.  Children's Reward Allocations: The Impact of Situational and Cognitive Factors. , 1978 .

[7]  T. Cook,et al.  Equity theory and the cognitive ability of children. , 1979 .

[8]  W. Damon Patterns of Change in Children's Social Reasoning: A Two-Year Longitudinal Study. , 1980 .

[9]  R. Enright,et al.  Distributive justice development and social class. , 1980 .

[10]  D. Lapsley,et al.  Distributive Justice Development and Social Class: A Replication , 1981 .

[11]  M. Krantz,et al.  The Effects of Recipients' Relative Age and Productivity on Children's Reward Allocation , 1981 .

[12]  Michael R. Harwell,et al.  Distributive Justice Development: Cross-Cultural, Contextual, and Longitudinal Evaluations. , 1984 .

[13]  M. Debusschere,et al.  Compromising between equity and equality: The effects of situational ambiguity and computational complexity , 1984 .

[14]  T. Tyler Justice in the Political Arena , 1984 .

[15]  Children's Concepts of Fair Sharing , 1984 .

[16]  V. Murphy-Berman,et al.  Factors affecting allocation to needy and meritorious recipients: A cross-cultural comparison. , 1984 .

[17]  J. Spence,et al.  Achievement American style: The rewards and costs of individualism. , 1985 .

[18]  T. Thorkildsen Justice in the classroom: the student's view , 1989 .