School of Psychology, The University of Auckland, New Zealand.
Br J Soc Psychol. 2015 Jun;54(2):324-40. doi: 10.1111/bjso.12080. Epub 2014 Aug 25.
The status-legitimacy hypothesis, which predicts that low-status groups will legitimize inequality more than high-status groups, has received inconsistent empirical support. To resolve this inconsistency, we hypothesized that low-status groups would display enhanced legitimation only when evaluating the fairness of the specific hierarchy responsible for their disadvantage. In a New Zealand-based probability sample (N = 6,162), we found that low-status ethnic groups (Asians and Pacific Islanders) perceived ethnic-group relations to be fairer than the high-status group (Europeans). However, these groups did not justify the overall political system more than the high-status group. In fact, Māori showed the least support for the political system. These findings clarify when the controversial status-legitimacy effects predicted by System Justification Theory will - and will not - emerge.
地位-合法性假说预测,低地位群体比高地位群体更会使不平等合法化,然而这一假说得到的实证支持并不一致。为了解决这一不一致,我们假设,只有在评价导致其劣势的具体等级制度的公平性时,低地位群体才会表现出更强的合法化。在一个基于新西兰的概率样本(N=6162)中,我们发现,低地位族裔群体(亚洲人和太平洋岛民)认为族裔关系比高地位群体(欧洲人)更公平。然而,这些群体并没有比高地位群体更支持整个政治制度。事实上,毛利人对政治制度的支持最少。这些发现阐明了系统合理化理论所预测的有争议的地位合法性效应何时会出现——以及何时不会出现。