1981
DOI: 10.1037/0012-1649.17.6.826
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Distributive justice development and social class: A replication.

Abstract: Fifty-six children from kindergarten and third grade were given the Distributive Justice Scale, vocabulary, and sociometric peer ratings. Results showed that regardless of grade the lower-class children lagged behind the middle-class children in distributive justice development even when verbal ability was controlled. The finding replicated a previous study drawn from the same population. Both studies showed statistically equivalent scores. The peer ratings showed that in both kindergarten and third grade, low… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…In contrast to the proposition of an age-related progression from less to more principled reasoning and thereby a more tolerant attitude (Enright & Lapsley, 1981), research indicates that older adolescents are often less tolerant than younger adolescents (Gieling, Thijs, & Verkuyten, 2010; Verkuyten & Slooter, 2007). One reason for this is that with age adolescents evaluate practices and rights increasingly in relation to other considerations and concerns, including the broader societal context.…”
Section: Intergroup Tolerationmentioning
confidence: 86%
“…In contrast to the proposition of an age-related progression from less to more principled reasoning and thereby a more tolerant attitude (Enright & Lapsley, 1981), research indicates that older adolescents are often less tolerant than younger adolescents (Gieling, Thijs, & Verkuyten, 2010; Verkuyten & Slooter, 2007). One reason for this is that with age adolescents evaluate practices and rights increasingly in relation to other considerations and concerns, including the broader societal context.…”
Section: Intergroup Tolerationmentioning
confidence: 86%
“…Studies in which both productivity and need have been manipulated suggest that older children ultimately go beyond the performance-based equity rule to integrate claims based on need-another input to the equity equation-with claims based on merit (e.g., Anderson & Butzin, 1978;Damon, 1977). Damon's (1975Damon's ( , 1977Damon's ( , 1980 cognitive-developmental model of positive justice reasoning incorporates this developmental progression and has been repeatedly confirmed (e.g., Enright, Enright, & Lapsley, 1981;Enright, Franklin, & Manheim, 1980;Enright et al, 1984).…”
mentioning
confidence: 90%
“…At more mature stages, need and special circumstances unique to each situation are taken into account. Subsequent research on children's ideas about positive justice have validated this stage-like progression in reasoning and have related the forms of reasoning to parallel organizing principles such as egocentrism, classification, and perspectivetaking (Damon, 1977(Damon, , 1980Enright, Enright, & Lapsley, 1981;Enright, Franklin, & Manheim, 1980;Freeman & Daly, 1984;Smith & Krantz, 1981).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%