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Immanent and ultimate justice beliefs in students from Croatia and Bosnia & Herzegovina

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Abstract:

Immanent justice (IJ) and ultimate justice (UJ) are variants of the belief in a just world that refer to the perception of present situation as just or the expectation of just compensation in the future, respectively. Supplementing previous attempts to provide empirical evidence for the differentiation between the two dimensions, a study with participants from two countries (Croatia and Bosnia & Herzegovina) examined the pattern of IJ and UJ relationships with a number of justice related variables (e.g., justice centrality, justice sensitivity) as well as of some other relevant variables (e.g., anomy, Machiavellianism). As expected, IJ and UJ were found to correlate positively in both samples but showed somewhat different pattern of relationships with other variables. For example, in both groups only UJ correlated with the belief in a personally just world; on the other hand, IJ was associated with the belief in the unjustness of the world only in one of the samples. Similar inconsistencies across the national samples point to the contextual factors that might play a role in the perception of immanent justice and the justice within an expanded time frame, and suggest an avenue for future research on these beliefs.

Author's Keywords:

immanent justice, ultimative justice, just world beliefs
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Association:
Name: ISPP 32nd Annual Scientific Meeting
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http://ispp.org


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MLA Citation:

Cubela Adoric, Vera. and Jurkin, Marina. "Immanent and ultimate justice beliefs in students from Croatia and Bosnia & Herzegovina" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the ISPP 32nd Annual Scientific Meeting, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland, Jul 14, 2009 <Not Available>. 2009-08-04 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p314685_index.html>

APA Citation:

Cubela Adoric, V. and Jurkin, M. , 2009-07-14 "Immanent and ultimate justice beliefs in students from Croatia and Bosnia & Herzegovina" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the ISPP 32nd Annual Scientific Meeting, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland <Not Available>. 2009-08-04 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p314685_index.html

Publication Type: Poster
Review Method: Peer Reviewed
Abstract: Immanent justice (IJ) and ultimate justice (UJ) are variants of the belief in a just world that refer to the perception of present situation as just or the expectation of just compensation in the future, respectively. Supplementing previous attempts to provide empirical evidence for the differentiation between the two dimensions, a study with participants from two countries (Croatia and Bosnia & Herzegovina) examined the pattern of IJ and UJ relationships with a number of justice related variables (e.g., justice centrality, justice sensitivity) as well as of some other relevant variables (e.g., anomy, Machiavellianism). As expected, IJ and UJ were found to correlate positively in both samples but showed somewhat different pattern of relationships with other variables. For example, in both groups only UJ correlated with the belief in a personally just world; on the other hand, IJ was associated with the belief in the unjustness of the world only in one of the samples. Similar inconsistencies across the national samples point to the contextual factors that might play a role in the perception of immanent justice and the justice within an expanded time frame, and suggest an avenue for future research on these beliefs.

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Associated Document Available All Academic Inc.
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Associated Document Available ISPP 32nd Annual Scientific Meeting


Similar Titles:
Justice beliefs and collective guilt among the students from Croatia and Bosnia & Herzegovina (Poster)

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Learning Identity: A Structural Equation Model of Students' State and Ethno-National Identities in Bosnia-Herzegovina and Croatia


 
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