4.4 Article

The Development of a Morality Against Power Abuse: The Case of Bribery

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-GENERAL
Volume 150, Issue 11, Pages 2362-2374

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/xge0000926

Keywords

moral development; authority; bribery; decision making; fairness

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The study found that children aged 10 and older gave harsher ratings to judges who accepted gifts and believed that they would become biased and secretive. Children's judgments were influenced by characters' authority level and modality of assessment.
In three experiments, we presented children and adults with opportunities to condemn acts resembling bribery, a prevalent form of power abuse. Adults and children (N = 333) in the United States rated the acceptability of actions by contest judges. Judges used their position in a self-serving (e.g., accepted or requested gifts from contestants prior to picking winners) versus responsible (e.g., rejected gifts, accepted gifts after judging) way. Across experiments, children by age 10 gave harsher ratings to judges who accepted or requested gifts prior to selecting the contest winners. Further, children expected judges to become biased (Experiment 1) and secretive (Experiment 2) if they accepted gifts during the contest. Children's judgments were influenced by characters' authority level (Experiment 3) and varied as a function of age and modality of assessment (e.g., whether gifts were accepted vs. rejected). Taken together, these results constitute evidence that by late childhood people showcase an emerging moral stance against unethical actions linked to authority-based corruption.

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