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Examining the relational underpinnings and consequences of system-justifying beliefs: Explaining the palliative effects of system justification.

Joaquín BahamondesNikhil Kumar SenguptaChris G SibleyDanny Osborne
Published in: The British journal of social psychology (2021)
People often perceive social systems as fair and legitimate in order to satisfy existential, epistemic, and relational needs. Although much work has examined the existential and epistemic roots to system justification, the relational motives underlying the tendency to justify the system have received comparatively less attention. We addressed this oversight by examining the associations approach and avoidance relational goals have with system justification in a national probability sample (N = 21,938). Consistent with the thesis that the need to belong motivates system justification, avoidance goals (i.e., the desire to avoid social conflict) correlated positively with system justification (approach goals also unexpectedly correlated positively with system justification). Also as hypothesized, system justification mediated the relationship between avoidance goals and belongingness. Moreover, system justification mediated the relationship between avoidance goals and belongingness. Finally, sequential mediation analyses revealed that avoidance goals predicted higher well-being via system justification and belongingness. This study is the first to demonstrate that system justification confers palliative benefits by satisfying two different relational goals.
Keyphrases
  • global health
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • public health
  • working memory
  • quality improvement
  • depressive symptoms