When Excuses Don't Work: The Persistent Injustice Effect Among Black Managers
- 1 March 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by JSTOR in Administrative Science Quarterly
- Vol. 43 (1) , 154-183
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2393594
Abstract
In this paper, we examine the underlying dynamics of the differences between blacks' and whites' responses to social accounts-explanations or excuses for negative actions and events. Across four studies we found that when black respondents observed unjust behaviors toward a hypothetical black victim, social accounts had a weak impact on perceptions of injustice, confirming the presence of what we call the "persistent injustice effect." We also found that social accounts have a weaker impact on perceptions of injustice than on disapproval of the harm-doer and posit that the persistent injustice effect results from a combination of in-group identification with the victim and the respondent's personal experiences with injustice. These two factors, we theorize, combine to create greater empathy for the victim.This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Employee theft as a reaction to underpayment inequity: The hidden cost of pay cuts.Journal of Applied Psychology, 1990
- Impression management: A literature review and two-component model.Psychological Bulletin, 1990
- The Movement of Conflict in Organizations: The Joint Dynamics of Splitting and TriangulationAdministrative Science Quarterly, 1989
- The Stigma of Bankruptcy: Spoiled Organizational Image and Its ManagementThe Academy of Management Journal, 1987
- The Fabrication of Meaning: Literary Interpretation in the United States, Great Britain, and the West IndiesAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1987
- Some Neglected Variables in Research on Discrimination in AppraisalsAcademy of Management Review, 1985
- Illusory correlation in interpersonal perception: A cognitive basis of stereotypic judgmentsJournal of Experimental Social Psychology, 1976