TY - JOUR
T1 - Always looking for a moral identity: The moral licensing effect in men convicted of domestic violence
AU - Vecina, María L.
AU - Marzana, Daniela
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
N2 - People who act in accord with moral standards enjoy a strong moral self-concept, but people with a strong moral concept do not always behave morally: sometimes they exhibit consistent behaviors and sometimes compensatory behaviors. Through two studies, this paper shows that people who do wrong enjoy a stronger moral self-concept and regulate their moral behavior accordingly. Specifically, men in court-mandated psychological treatment for having employed violence against their partners manage to preserve a very positive moral self-concept. They also exhibit moral self-regulation: when prompted to consider their high moral self-concepts, they recalled performing significantly more prosocial behaviors in the previous year (consistency effect), and immediately following this, they relaxed their future intentions to act in prosocial manners over the next year (licensing effect). This novel connection between intimate partner violence and moral regulation allows us to observe the dark side of feeling too moral in a sensitive sample.
AB - People who act in accord with moral standards enjoy a strong moral self-concept, but people with a strong moral concept do not always behave morally: sometimes they exhibit consistent behaviors and sometimes compensatory behaviors. Through two studies, this paper shows that people who do wrong enjoy a stronger moral self-concept and regulate their moral behavior accordingly. Specifically, men in court-mandated psychological treatment for having employed violence against their partners manage to preserve a very positive moral self-concept. They also exhibit moral self-regulation: when prompted to consider their high moral self-concepts, they recalled performing significantly more prosocial behaviors in the previous year (consistency effect), and immediately following this, they relaxed their future intentions to act in prosocial manners over the next year (licensing effect). This novel connection between intimate partner violence and moral regulation allows us to observe the dark side of feeling too moral in a sensitive sample.
KW - History and Philosophy of Science
KW - Intimate partner violence (IPV)
KW - Moral licensing effect
KW - Moral self-concept
KW - Psychology (all)
KW - Psychology (miscellaneous)
KW - History and Philosophy of Science
KW - Intimate partner violence (IPV)
KW - Moral licensing effect
KW - Moral self-concept
KW - Psychology (all)
KW - Psychology (miscellaneous)
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/117168
UR - http://www.elsevier.com/loate/newideapsych
U2 - 10.1016/j.newideapsych.2016.02.001
DO - 10.1016/j.newideapsych.2016.02.001
M3 - Article
SN - 0732-118X
VL - 41
SP - 33
EP - 38
JO - New Ideas in Psychology
JF - New Ideas in Psychology
ER -