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Research Article
Victim Derogation and Victim Enhancement as Alternate Routes to System Justification
Aaron C. Kay 1 , John T. Jost 2 , and Sean Young 1
  1 Stanford University and   2 New York University
 Address correspondence to Aaron C. Kay, Department of Psychology, Jordan Hall, Building 420, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, e-mail: aaronk@psych.stanford.edu, or to John T. Jost, Department of Psychology, New York University, 6 Washington Pl., Room 578, New York, NY 10003-6634, e-mail: john.jost@nyu.edu.
Copyright Copyright © 2005 American Psychological Society

ABSTRACT

Abstract—Numerous studies have documented the potential for victim-blaming attributions to justify the status quo. Recent work suggests that complementary, victim-enhancing stereotypes may also increase support for existing social arrangements. We seek to reconcile these seemingly contradictory findings by proposing that victim derogation and victim enhancement are alternate routes to system justification, with the preferred route depending on the perception of a causal link between trait and outcome. Derogating "losers" (and lionizing "winners") on traits (e.g., intelligence) that are causally related to outcomes (e.g., wealth vs. poverty) serves to increase system justification, as does compensating "losers" (and downgrading "winners") on traits (e.g., physical attractiveness) that are causally unrelated to those outcomes. We provide converging evidence using system-threat and stereotype-activation paradigms.


(Received 3/8/04; Accepted 6/17/04)

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.0956-7976.2005.00810.x About DOI

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