Charles Stewart Mott Department of Public Health, College of Human Medicine, Michigan State University, Flint, Michigan, United States of America.
School of Nursing, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2024 Feb 26;19(2):e0297762. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0297762. eCollection 2024.
Prior research has shown that a belief in personal justice (i.e., justice for self) is associated with better health and well-being, whereas a belief in justice more generally (i.e., justice for others) is unrelated. However, an emerging perspective is that racial differences may overlay the relationships between multidimensional beliefs about justice and indices of well-being. This includes that well-being among African Americans may be additionally supported by rejecting rather than endorsing some forms of believing in justice. In the present study, we consider racial similarities and differences in the links between beliefs about justice for self and others and emotional well-being. African Americans (N = 117) and White Americans (N = 188) completed measures of beliefs about justice for self and others, and also measures of dispositional tendencies towards experiencing positive and negative emotion (i.e., positive and negative affectivity). In both groups, beliefs about justice for the self were associated with greater positive affect and reduced negative affect. However, beliefs about justice for others were additionally associated with greater negative affect only among African Americans. The link between justice for others and negative affect among African Americans was not attributable to measurement or mean differences in justice beliefs across racial groups, or to socioeconomic differences. Results align with an emerging perspective that simultaneously endorsing and rejecting justice beliefs may be vital to preserving well-being for some racial minorities.
先前的研究表明,个人正义信念(即自我正义)与更好的健康和幸福感相关,而更广泛的正义信念(即他人正义)则与之无关。然而,一种新兴的观点认为,种族差异可能会掩盖正义多维信念与幸福感指标之间的关系。这包括非裔美国人的幸福感可能会因为拒绝而不是支持某些形式的正义信念而得到额外支持。在本研究中,我们考虑了自我正义和他人正义信念与情绪幸福感之间联系的种族相似性和差异。非裔美国人和美国白人(N=117 和 N=188)分别完成了自我正义和他人正义信念的测量,以及体验积极和消极情绪的倾向(即积极和消极情感)的测量。在两个群体中,自我正义信念与更大的积极情绪和减少的消极情绪相关。然而,只有在非裔美国人中,他人正义信念才与更大的消极情绪相关。非裔美国人中他人正义与消极情绪之间的联系不能归因于跨种族群体的正义信念的测量或均值差异,也不能归因于社会经济差异。研究结果与一种新兴观点一致,即同时支持和拒绝正义信念可能对某些少数族裔的幸福感至关重要。