Critical review of just-world belief measures, arguing for orthogonal just, unjust, and random world dimensions and better scales.
SummaryAI
This review synthesizes a decade of research linking self-reported belief in a just world to a wide range of psychological and demographic variables, assessing what the common Rubin & Peplau scales actually capture. It critiques the concept and measurement as potentially multidimensional, warning that treating just-world belief as a single trait may blur distinct beliefs. The authors propose that beliefs in a just, unjust, and random world may be orthogonal, reframing how individual differences should be modeled. They outline directions for improved self-report measurement and for research on the development (aetiology) of just-world belief within and across cultures.
Method SnapshotAI
Critical narrative review and evaluation of correlational findings from questionnaire-based just-world belief research.
BackgroundAI
Basic social/personality psychology of individual differences, measurement with self-report scales, and the just-world hypothesis tradition.