团体分配中儿童对程序正义与分配正义概念的掌握
Children’s Mastery of the Concepts of Procedural and Distributive Justice Reflected in a Distribution Activity
DOI: 10.12677/AP.2014.42036, PDF, HTML,  被引量 下载: 3,163  浏览: 15,480 
作者: 徐华女:武汉大学哲学学院心理学系,武汉;;黄蕴智:香港中文大学教育心理学系,香港
关键词: 道德发展正义概念表征重述模型程序正义分配正义Moral Development; Concept of Justice; Representational Redescription Model; Procedural Justice; Distributive Justice
摘要: 基于表征重述模型的“隐性显性”角度,通过真实性团体分配任务,探讨5~9岁儿童(N = 120)在程序正义与分配正义概念上的掌握和经回馈获得的发展,以及同理心对分配过程和分配结果的作用。结果显示,被试对程序正义概念的掌握,整体发展水平较低。在程序正义与分配正义概念掌握上,被试对公平程序、平等和需要概念的隐性掌握(通过行为表现)均显著高于显性掌握(通过言语解释)。儿童对程序正义概念与平等概念的掌握在5~7岁之间有显著提高,对需要概念的掌握则未呈现显著年龄差异。回馈促进了儿童采用协商及较公平的程序(反映程序正义概念的隐性水平)。同理心唤醒操纵对分配程序和结果未产生明显作用。
Abstract: Through the design of a real-life distribution activity in small groups, the present study investigated the development of children’s concepts of procedural and distributive justice in the implicit-explicit dimension based on Karmiloff-Smith’s Representational Redescription model (1992). The role of empathy in the process and outcome of distribution was also examined. A total of 120 children aged 5 to 9 years participated in the study. The results indicated that participants’ mastery level of the concept of procedural justice was on the whole relatively low. For the conceptual understanding of both procedural justice and distributive justice (including the subconcepts of equality and need), participants performed significantly higher on the implicit level (reflected by actual behaviors during the distribution activity) than on the explicit level (reflected by verbal explanations). Significant growth by age was found between the 5- and 7-year-old groups in the six indices of just procedures and mastery of the concept of equality, but no significant age differ- ence was found in the mastery of the concept of need. The effect of feedback was supported by the improvement of group performance in negotiation and the use of just procedures, as well as the improvement in individual members’ verbal suggestions concerning just procedures. These improvements are at the implicit level of the concept of procedural justice. The results did not show a marked effect of empathetic arousal on the process and outcome of the distribution activity.
文章引用:徐华女, 黄蕴智. 团体分配中儿童对程序正义与分配正义概念的掌握[J]. 心理学进展, 2014, 4(2): 239-251. http://dx.doi.org/10.12677/AP.2014.42036

参考文献

[1] Adams, J.S. (1965). Inequity in social exchange. In L. Berkowitz (Ed.), Advances in Experimental Social Psychology (pp. 267-289). New York: Academic Press.
[2] Damon, W. (1977). The social world of the child. London: Jos-sey-Bass.
[3] Darley, J.M., & Shultz, T.R. (1990). Moral judgments: Their content and acquisition. Annual Review of Psychology, 41, 525556.
[4] Deutsch, M. (1975). Equity, equality, and need: What determines which value will be used as the basis of distributive justice. Journal of Social Issues, 31, 137-149.
[5] Deutsch. M. (1985). Distributive justice: A so-cial-psychological perspective. New Haven: Yale University Press.
[6] Fogan, J., & Tyler, T.R. (2005). Legal socialization of children and adolescents. Social Justice Research, 18, 217-241.
[7] Fondacaro, M.R., Dunkle, M.E., & Pathak, M.K. (1998). Procedural justice in resolving family disputes: A psychosocial analysis of individual and family functioning in late adolescence. Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 27, 101-119.
[8] Fondacaro, M.R., Jackson, S.L., & Luescher, J. (2002). Toward the assessment of procedural and distributive justice in resolving family disputes. Social Justice Research, 15, 341-371.
[9] Gold, L.J., Darley, J.M., Hilton, J.L., & Zanna, M.P. (1984). Children’s perceptions of procedural justice. Child Development, 55, 1752-1759.
[10] Greenberg, J. (1986). Determinants of perceived fairness of performance evaluations. Journal of Applied Psychology, 71(2), 340–342.
[11] Habermas, J. (1983/1990). Moral consciousness and communicative action (C. Lenhardt & S. W. Nicholsen, Trans.). Cambridge: MIT Press.
[12] Hicks, A.J., & Lawrence, J.A. (1993). Children’s criteria for procedural justice: Developing a young people’s procedural justice scale. Social Justice Research, 6, 163-182.
[13] Hoffman, M.L. (2000). Empathy and moral development: Implications for caring and justice. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
[14] Homans, G. (1961). Social behavior: Its elementary forms. New York: Harcourt, Brace & World.
[15] Hook, J., & Cook. T.D. (1979). Equity theory and the cognitive ability of children. Psychological Bulletin, 86, 429-445.
[16] Karmiloff-Smith, A. (1992). Beyond modularity: A developmental perspective on cognitive science. Cambridge: MIT Press.
[17] Leventhal, G.S. (1976). The distribution of rewards and resources in groups and organizations. In L. Berkowitz & E. Walster (Eds.), Advances in Experimental Social Psychology, Vol. 9 (pp. 92-131). New York: Academic Press.
[18] Moore, C. (2009). Fairness in children’s resource allocation depends on the recipient. Psychological Science, 20, 944-948.
[19] Piaget, J. (1932/1965). The moral judgment of the child. New York: Free Press.
[20] Rawls, J. (1971/1999). A theory of justice. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
[21] Sigelman, C.K., & Waitzman, K.A. (1991). The development of distributive justice orientation: Contextual Influences on children’s resource allocations. Child Development, 62, 1367-1378.
[22] Stuart, J., Fondarco, M., Miller, S.A., Brown, V., & Brank, E.M. (2008). Procedural justice in family con-flict resolution and deviant peer group involvement among adolescents: The mediating influence of peer conflict. Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 37, 674-684.
[23] Thomson, N.R., & Jones, E.F. (2005). Children’s, adolescents’, and young adults’ reward allocations to hypothetical siblings and fairness judgments: Effects of actor gender, character type, and allocation pattern. The Journal of Psychology, 139, 349-367.
[24] Walster, E., Berscheid, E., & Walster, G.W. (1973). New directions in equity research. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 25, 151-176.
[25] Wong, M., & Nunes, T. (2003). Hong Kong children’s concept of distributive justice. Early Child Development and Care, 173, 119-129.
[26] Zinser, O., Starnes, D.M., & Wild, H.D. (1991). The effect of need on the allocation behavior of children. Journal of Genetic Psychology, 152, 35-46.