The personality basis of justice: The five-factor model as an integrative model of personality and procedural fairness effects on cooperation


Article
volume 22, issue 6 pp 519-539.
This publication is part of collection
Related Files

(publisher's version.url.txt, 34 bytes)
Repository contains one additional file which is not publicly available

Building upon the self-based model of cooperation (De Cremer & Tyler, [2005]), the present study investigates the relationship between the five-factor model (FFM) and cooperation. Study 1 (N = 56), an experiment conducted in the laboratory, and Study 2 (N = 116), a field study conducted in an organisational context, yielded a moderator effect between neuroticism and procedural fairness in explaining cooperation. Study 3 (N = 177) showed that this moderator effect was mediated by the self-uncertainty and relational variables proposed by the self-based model of cooperation. It is concluded that the FFM is useful in explaining cooperation and contributes to a better understanding of (procedural) fairness effects. Moreover, the necessity to build integrative, multi-level models that combine core and surface aspects of personality to explain the effects of fairness on cooperation is elaborated upon.



Keywords