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Kirkland, K., Van Lange, P. A. M., Gorenz, D., Blake, K., Amiot, C. E., Ausmees, L....Bastian, B. (2024). High economic inequality is linked to greater moralization. PNAS Nexus. 3 (7)
K. Kirkland et al., "High economic inequality is linked to greater moralization", in PNAS Nexus, vol. 3, no. 7, 2024
@article{kirkland2024_1782132051877,
author = "Kirkland, K. and Van Lange, P. A. M. and Gorenz, D. and Blake, K. and Amiot, C. E. and Ausmees, L. and Baguma, P. and Barry, O. and Becker, M. and Bilewicz, M. and Boonyasiriwat, W. and Booth, R. W. and Castelain, T. and Costantini, G. and Dimdins, G. and Espinosa, A. and Finchilescu, G. and Fischer, R. and Friese, M. and Gómez, Á. and González, R. and Goto, N. and Halama, P. and Hurtado-Parrado, C. and Ilustrisimo, R. D. and Jiga-Boy, G. M. and Kuppens, P. and Loughnan, S. and Mastor, K. A. and McLatchie, N. and Novak, L. M. and Onyekachi, B. N. and Rizwan, M. and Schaller, M. and Serafimovska, E. and Suh, E. M. and Swann Jr., W. B. and Tong, E. M. W. and Torres, A. and Turner, R. N. and Vauclair, C.-M. and Vinogradov, A. and Wang, Z. and Yeung, V. W. L. and Bastian, B.",
title = "High economic inequality is linked to greater moralization",
journal = "PNAS Nexus",
year = "2024",
volume = "3",
number = "7",
doi = "10.1093/pnasnexus/pgae221",
url = "https://academic.oup.com/pnasnexus"
}
TY - JOUR TI - High economic inequality is linked to greater moralization T2 - PNAS Nexus VL - 3 IS - 7 AU - Kirkland, K. AU - Van Lange, P. A. M. AU - Gorenz, D. AU - Blake, K. AU - Amiot, C. E. AU - Ausmees, L. AU - Baguma, P. AU - Barry, O. AU - Becker, M. AU - Bilewicz, M. AU - Boonyasiriwat, W. AU - Booth, R. W. AU - Castelain, T. AU - Costantini, G. AU - Dimdins, G. AU - Espinosa, A. AU - Finchilescu, G. AU - Fischer, R. AU - Friese, M. AU - Gómez, Á. AU - González, R. AU - Goto, N. AU - Halama, P. AU - Hurtado-Parrado, C. AU - Ilustrisimo, R. D. AU - Jiga-Boy, G. M. AU - Kuppens, P. AU - Loughnan, S. AU - Mastor, K. A. AU - McLatchie, N. AU - Novak, L. M. AU - Onyekachi, B. N. AU - Rizwan, M. AU - Schaller, M. AU - Serafimovska, E. AU - Suh, E. M. AU - Swann Jr., W. B. AU - Tong, E. M. W. AU - Torres, A. AU - Turner, R. N. AU - Vauclair, C.-M. AU - Vinogradov, A. AU - Wang, Z. AU - Yeung, V. W. L. AU - Bastian, B. PY - 2024 SN - 2752-6542 DO - 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgae221 UR - https://academic.oup.com/pnasnexus AB - Throughout the 21st century, economic inequality is predicted to increase as we face new challenges, from changes in the technological landscape to the growing climate crisis. It is crucial we understand how these changes in inequality may affect how people think and behave. We propose that economic inequality threatens the social fabric of society, in turn increasing moralization—that is, the greater tendency to employ or emphasize morality in everyday life—as an attempt to restore order and control. Using longitudinal data from X, formerly known as Twitter, our first study demonstrates that high economic inequality is associated with greater use of moral language online (e.g. the use of words such as “disgust”, “hurt”, and “respect’). Study 2 then examined data from 41 regions around the world, generally showing that higher inequality has a small association with harsher moral judgments of people's everyday actions. Together these findings demonstrate that economic inequality is linked to the tendency to see the world through a moral lens. ER -
English