TY - JOUR
T1 - The development of children's preferences for equality and equity across 13 individualistic and collectivist cultures
AU - Huppert, Elizabeth
AU - Cowell, Jason M.
AU - Cheng, Yawei
AU - Contreras-Ibáñez, Carlos
AU - Gomez-Sicard, Natalia
AU - Gonzalez-Gadea, Maria Luz
AU - Huepe, David
AU - Ibanez, Agustin
AU - Lee, Kang
AU - Mahasneh, Randa
AU - Malcolm-Smith, Susan
AU - Salas, Natalia
AU - Selcuk, Bilge
AU - Tungodden, Bertil
AU - Wong, Alina
AU - Zhou, Xinyue
AU - Decety, Jean
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd
PY - 2019/3
Y1 - 2019/3
N2 - A concern for fairness is a fundamental and universal element of morality. To examine the extent to which cultural norms are integrated into fairness cognitions and influence social preferences regarding equality and equity, a large sample of children (N 2,163) aged 4–11 were tested in 13 diverse countries. Children participated in three versions of a third-party, contextualized distributive justice game between two hypothetical recipients differing in terms of wealth, merit, and empathy. Social decision-making in these games revealed universal age-related shifts from equality-based to equity-based distribution motivations across cultures. However, differences in levels of individualism and collectivism between the 13 countries predicted the age and extent to which children favor equity in each condition. Children from the most individualistic cultures endorsed equitable distributions to a greater degree than children from more collectivist cultures when recipients differed in regards to wealth and merit. However, in an empathy context where recipients differed in injury, children from the most collectivist cultures exhibited greater preferences to distribute resource equitably compared to children from more individualistic cultures. Children from the more individualistic cultures also favored equitable distributions at an earlier age than children from more collectivist cultures overall. These results demonstrate aspects of both cross-cultural similarity and divergence in the development of fairness preferences.
AB - A concern for fairness is a fundamental and universal element of morality. To examine the extent to which cultural norms are integrated into fairness cognitions and influence social preferences regarding equality and equity, a large sample of children (N 2,163) aged 4–11 were tested in 13 diverse countries. Children participated in three versions of a third-party, contextualized distributive justice game between two hypothetical recipients differing in terms of wealth, merit, and empathy. Social decision-making in these games revealed universal age-related shifts from equality-based to equity-based distribution motivations across cultures. However, differences in levels of individualism and collectivism between the 13 countries predicted the age and extent to which children favor equity in each condition. Children from the most individualistic cultures endorsed equitable distributions to a greater degree than children from more collectivist cultures when recipients differed in regards to wealth and merit. However, in an empathy context where recipients differed in injury, children from the most collectivist cultures exhibited greater preferences to distribute resource equitably compared to children from more individualistic cultures. Children from the more individualistic cultures also favored equitable distributions at an earlier age than children from more collectivist cultures overall. These results demonstrate aspects of both cross-cultural similarity and divergence in the development of fairness preferences.
KW - collectivism/individualism
KW - cross-cultural development
KW - equality
KW - equity
KW - fairness
KW - morality
KW - resource allocation
KW - social decision-making
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85053398615&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/desc.12729
DO - 10.1111/desc.12729
M3 - Article
C2 - 30207638
AN - SCOPUS:85053398615
SN - 1363-755X
VL - 22
JO - Developmental Science
JF - Developmental Science
IS - 2
M1 - e12729
ER -