Moral licensing refers to the effect that when people initially behave in a moral way, they are later more likely to display behaviors that are immoral, unethical, or otherwise problematic. We provide a state-of-the-art overview of moral licensing by conducting a meta-analysis of 91 studies (7,397 participants) that compare a licensing condition with a control condition. Based on this analysis, the magnitude of the moral licensing effect is estimated to be a Cohen’s d of 0.31. We tested potential moderators and found that published studies tend to have larger moral licensing effects than unpublished studies. We found no empirical evidence for other moderators that were theorized to be of importance. The effect size estimate implies that stu...
Theories of moral identity assert that people are motivated to maintain positive self-perceptions of...
People are faced with diverse types of trade-off all the time. Some of these economic choices, calle...
Moral licensing, equivalently called "self-licensing", is the instrumental use of a Good Act to cove...
Moral licensing refers to the effect that when people initially behave in a moral way, they are late...
Kuper N, Bott A. Has the evidence for moral licensing been inflated by publication bias? Meta-Psycho...
The present work includes three attempts to replicate the moral licensing effect by Sachdeva, Iliev,...
Moral licensing is a cognitive bias, which enables individuals to behave immorally without threateni...
Research suggests that when individuals have done a good deed, this grants them `license' to engage ...
The present study examines the role of religious priming in moral licensing behavior. We included 58...
Acting virtuously can subsequently free people to act less-than-virtuously. We review recent insight...
Moral licensing occurs when someone who initially behaved morally or cooperatively, later behaves le...
Previous research on moral licensing demonstrates that individuals who behave morally are less willi...
Past good deeds can liberate individuals to engage in behaviors that are immoral, unethical, or othe...
The present study examines the role of cost to self in moral licensing. Previous research shows that...
Past moral behavior sometimes discourages subsequent moral behavior and allows for subsequent immora...
Theories of moral identity assert that people are motivated to maintain positive self-perceptions of...
People are faced with diverse types of trade-off all the time. Some of these economic choices, calle...
Moral licensing, equivalently called "self-licensing", is the instrumental use of a Good Act to cove...
Moral licensing refers to the effect that when people initially behave in a moral way, they are late...
Kuper N, Bott A. Has the evidence for moral licensing been inflated by publication bias? Meta-Psycho...
The present work includes three attempts to replicate the moral licensing effect by Sachdeva, Iliev,...
Moral licensing is a cognitive bias, which enables individuals to behave immorally without threateni...
Research suggests that when individuals have done a good deed, this grants them `license' to engage ...
The present study examines the role of religious priming in moral licensing behavior. We included 58...
Acting virtuously can subsequently free people to act less-than-virtuously. We review recent insight...
Moral licensing occurs when someone who initially behaved morally or cooperatively, later behaves le...
Previous research on moral licensing demonstrates that individuals who behave morally are less willi...
Past good deeds can liberate individuals to engage in behaviors that are immoral, unethical, or othe...
The present study examines the role of cost to self in moral licensing. Previous research shows that...
Past moral behavior sometimes discourages subsequent moral behavior and allows for subsequent immora...
Theories of moral identity assert that people are motivated to maintain positive self-perceptions of...
People are faced with diverse types of trade-off all the time. Some of these economic choices, calle...
Moral licensing, equivalently called "self-licensing", is the instrumental use of a Good Act to cove...