Belief in a just world

How strongly you feel the world is fundamentally fair — that people, including you, tend to get what they deserve.

Belief in a just world — the sense that people generally get what they deserve and deserve what they get — was identified by Melvin Lerner (1980) and is among social psychology's most-studied beliefs (Rubin & Peplau, 1975; Lipkus, 1991). Claudia Dalbert (1999) distinguished two strands: a general belief that the world at large is fair, and a personal belief that your own life is fair. A stronger personal belief tends to go with wellbeing and resilience; a stronger general belief is also linked to more readily assuming that victims brought misfortune on themselves. Neither end is right or wrong — this is a descriptive self-report of a worldview, not a claim about how just the world actually is. Distinct from karma (cosmic moral balance) and locus of control (felt personal agency). (Belief in a Just World scale (Lerner; Dalbert))

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