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      Children’s Recognition of Fairness and Others’ Welfare in a Resource Allocation Task: Age Related Changes

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          Abstract

          The present study investigated age-related changes regarding children’s ( N = 136) conceptions of fairness and others’ welfare in a merit-based resource allocation paradigm. To test whether children at 3- to 5-years-old and 6- to 8-years-old took others’ welfare into account when dividing resources, in addition to merit and equality concerns, children were asked to allocate, judge, and reason about allocations of necessary (needed to avoid harm) and luxury (enjoyable to have) resources to a hardworking and a lazy character. While 3- to 5-year-olds did not differentiate between distributing luxury and necessary resources, 6- to 8-year-olds allocated luxury resources more meritoriously than necessary resources. Further, children based their allocations of necessary resources on concerns for others’ welfare, rather than merit, even when one character was described as working harder. The findings revealed that, with age, children incorporated the concerns for others’ welfare and merit into their conceptions of fairness in a resource allocation context, and prioritized these concerns differently depending on whether they were allocating luxury or necessary resources. Further, with age, children weighed multiple moral concerns including equality, merit, and others’ welfare, when determining the fair allocation of resources.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          0260564
          20510
          Dev Psychol
          Dev Psychol
          Developmental psychology
          0012-1649
          1939-0599
          28 May 2016
          August 2016
          01 August 2017
          : 52
          : 8
          : 1307-1317
          Affiliations
          University of Maryland
          Author notes
          Corresponding author. Michael T. Rizzo, Department of Human Development and Quantitative Methodology, University of Maryland, 3304 Benjamin Building, College of Education, College Park, MD, 20742-1131, Phone: (630) 400 – 6953. mtrizzo@ 123456umd.edu
          Article
          PMC4965180 PMC4965180 4965180 nihpa790272
          10.1037/dev0000134
          4965180
          27455189
          bcfcf9d2-1af4-41bb-8bd4-4faaf46c1371
          History
          Categories
          Article

          Moral judgment,fairness,resource allocation,resource type,others’ welfare

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