Fair Is Not Fair Everywhere.
Distributing the spoils of a joint enterprise on the basis of work contribution or relative productivity seems natural to the modern Western mind. But such notions of merit-based distributive justice may be culturally constructed norms that vary with the social and economic structure of a group. In the present research, we showed that children from three different cultures have very different ideas about distributive justice. Whereas children from a modern Western society distributed the spoils of a joint enterprise precisely in proportion to productivity, children from a gerontocratic pastoralist society in Africa did not take merit into account at all. Children from a partially hunter-gatherer, egalitarian African culture distributed the spoils more equally than did the other two cultures, with merit playing only a limited role. This pattern of results suggests that some basic notions of distributive justice are not universal intuitions of the human species but rather culturally constructed behavioral norms.
Duke Scholars
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- Social Justice
- Reward
- Namibia
- Male
- Kenya
- Humans
- Germany
- Female
- Experimental Psychology
- Cross-Cultural Comparison
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Social Justice
- Reward
- Namibia
- Male
- Kenya
- Humans
- Germany
- Female
- Experimental Psychology
- Cross-Cultural Comparison