The authors focus on the effects an authority’s apparent inconsistency between persons on judgments of relational treatment and procedural justice following negative procedures (i.e., procedures that people commonly regard as unfair). In Experiment 1, participants responded most negatively following a procedure that denied them, but granted another participant, an opportunity to voice an opinion when the intergroup context raised suspicions of bias (i.e., when both the experimenter and another participant were outgroup members). In Experiment 2, participants responded most negatively when the experimenter had expressed biased attitudes in favor of another participant, but this effect occurred only following procedures that denied parti...
The present research contributes to a growing literature on observer reactions to injustice experien...
Reactions to decisions are shaped by both outcome and procedural fairness. Moreover, outcome and pro...
Theorizing on procedural justice has assumed that people’s reactions to outgroup authorities are to ...
The authors focus on the eVects an authority’s apparent inconsistency between persons on judgments o...
The authors focus on the effects an authority's apparent inconsistency between persons on judgments ...
It is argued here that expectations of bias (vs. no bias) play a key role in explaini...
In this article, we study how the strength of outcome dependence, defined as the extent to which peo...
In this article, we study how the strength of outcome dependence, defined as the extent to which pe...
We investigate how the direct activation of relational versus instrumental concerns affects reaction...
This article focuses on the psychology of the fair process effect (the frequently replicated finding...
The present research examines how emotions of a third party interacting with an authority who has tr...
Theorizing on procedural justice has assumed that people's reactions to outgroup authorities are to ...
Reactions to decisions are shaped by both outcome and procedural fairness. Moreover, outcome and pro...
Reactions to decisions are shaped by both outcome and procedural fairness. Moreover, outcome and pro...
The present research contributes to a growing literature on observer reactions to injustice experien...
The present research contributes to a growing literature on observer reactions to injustice experien...
Reactions to decisions are shaped by both outcome and procedural fairness. Moreover, outcome and pro...
Theorizing on procedural justice has assumed that people’s reactions to outgroup authorities are to ...
The authors focus on the eVects an authority’s apparent inconsistency between persons on judgments o...
The authors focus on the effects an authority's apparent inconsistency between persons on judgments ...
It is argued here that expectations of bias (vs. no bias) play a key role in explaini...
In this article, we study how the strength of outcome dependence, defined as the extent to which peo...
In this article, we study how the strength of outcome dependence, defined as the extent to which pe...
We investigate how the direct activation of relational versus instrumental concerns affects reaction...
This article focuses on the psychology of the fair process effect (the frequently replicated finding...
The present research examines how emotions of a third party interacting with an authority who has tr...
Theorizing on procedural justice has assumed that people's reactions to outgroup authorities are to ...
Reactions to decisions are shaped by both outcome and procedural fairness. Moreover, outcome and pro...
Reactions to decisions are shaped by both outcome and procedural fairness. Moreover, outcome and pro...
The present research contributes to a growing literature on observer reactions to injustice experien...
The present research contributes to a growing literature on observer reactions to injustice experien...
Reactions to decisions are shaped by both outcome and procedural fairness. Moreover, outcome and pro...
Theorizing on procedural justice has assumed that people’s reactions to outgroup authorities are to ...