“…A motivated cognition perspective can also be used as a foundation to facilitate meaningful integration between the fairness literature and other domains, including moral judgments, behavioral economics, ethical decision making, and behavioral ethics. Consider behavioral ethics as an example—numerous scholars have advocated for integration between behavioral ethics and fairness (e.g., Crawshaw, Cropanzano, Bell, & Nadisic, 2013; Cropanzano & Stein, 2009; Folger et al, 2005; Fortin, Nadisic, Bell, Crawshaw, & Cropanzano, 2016; Schminke, Ambrose, & Noel, 1997). An interesting find was that the reasons for proposed integration are often (implicitly) related to motivated cognitions (e.g., the presence of similar motives, the importance of identity; e.g., Skitka, 2003).…”