Full Text
Distributive Justice
Guillermina Jasso
Subject
Law
Sociology
»
Government, Politics, and Law, Stratification and Inequality
Key-Topics
justice, power
DOI: 10.1111/b.9781405124331.2007.x
Extract
Every day, and in all walks of life, the sense of justice is at work. Humans form ideas about what is just; and they make judgments about the justice or injustice of the things they see around them. Both the ideas of justice and the assessments of injustice set in motion a train of individual and social processes, touching virtually every area of the human experience. Thus, in the quest to understand human behavior, understanding the operation of the sense of justice is basic. And justice is central across the subfields of sociology. This entry summarizes the synthesis of the late twentieth century and the foundation for the coming synthesis of the twenty-first century. The first synthesis looks inward, providing a parsimonious and coherent model for understanding and investigating every aspect of distributive justice. The coming second synthesis looks outward, forging the links between justice and the two other primordial sociobehavioral forces, status and power, and proposing a new unified theory. Justice analysis begins with four central questions ( Jasso & Wegener 1997 ): 1 What do individuals and societies think is just, and why? 2 How do ideas of justice shape determination of actual situations? 3 What is the magnitude of the perceived injustice associated with departures from perfect justice? 4 What are the behavioral and social consequences of perceived injustice? Justice ... log in or subscribe to read full text
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