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PERSONAL AND GENERAL BELIEF IN A JUST WORLD
1. Introduction and Background
The Belief in a Just World (BJW) represents one of the most extensively researched constructs in
personality and social psychology, addressing fundamental questions about how individuals navigate
fairness, suffering, and inequality within their social environments. Lerner (1980) originally
conceptualised BJW as a motivational need to believe that the world is a just place where people
generally get what they deserve and deserve what they get. This belief serves essential psychological
functions, including enabling individuals to pursue long-term goals with confidence that their efforts
will be fairly rewarded and providing a coherent framework for interpreting both positive and
negative life outcomes. Since its introduction, the construct has undergone significant theoretical
refinement, with researchers recognising that BJW is not monolithic but rather comprises distinct
dimensions that operate differently across contexts and predict divergent psychological and
behavioural outcomes (Furnham, 2003).
The most critical distinction within BJW conceptualisations concerns the differentiation between
personal BJW and general BJW. Personal BJW refers to the belief that the world is just for oneself
specifically, that one's own efforts and actions will be fairly rewarded, and that one gets what one
deserves as an individual. General BJW, in contrast, refers to the belief that the world is just for
others and for people in general, that outcomes are fair and deserved even when observing others'
circumstances (Sutton & Douglass, 2020). What differentiates these dimensions is fundamentally the
target of the justice belief. Personal BJW is self-referential and operates as a personal resource that
motivates individual effort, whereas general BJW is other-referential and operates as an ideological
framework for interpreting social inequality. Research has consistently demonstrated that these two
dimensions have divergent psychological consequences; personal BJW is positively associated with
well-being, motivation, and prosocial action, while general BJW is more strongly associated with
victim-blaming, justification of inequality, and reduced support for redistributive policies (Stroebe,
Postmes, Täuber & van Prooijen, 2015).
The study of BJW holds particular significance within the South African context, a nation
characterised by a complex history of apartheid-era systemic injustice, ongoing socioeconomic
inequality, and contemporary efforts toward social justice and reconciliation. South Africa is
consistently ranked as one of the most unequal countries in the world, with vast disparities in income,
wealth, access to quality education, healthcare, housing, and employment opportunities persisting
along racial lines decades after the formal end of apartheid (Radebe, 2025). Within this context,
understanding how BJW operates becomes critically important for addressing victim-blaming,
justifying inequality, and predicting support for social justice movements. The project description
notes that support for justice movements can be measured across multiple levels including
ideological support, donation behaviour, and participation in South African social justice movements
addressing gender justice, trade unions, environmental justice, and service delivery. Understanding
how personal and general BJW relate to support for these movements is essential for predicting who
will engage in collective action to address injustice versus who will oppose such efforts.
PERSONAL AND GENERAL BELIEF IN A JUST WORLD
1. Introduction and Background
The Belief in a Just World (BJW) represents one of the most extensively researched constructs in
personality and social psychology, addressing fundamental questions about how individuals navigate
fairness, suffering, and inequality within their social environments. Lerner (1980) originally
conceptualised BJW as a motivational need to believe that the world is a just place where people
generally get what they deserve and deserve what they get. This belief serves essential psychological
functions, including enabling individuals to pursue long-term goals with confidence that their efforts
will be fairly rewarded and providing a coherent framework for interpreting both positive and
negative life outcomes. Since its introduction, the construct has undergone significant theoretical
refinement, with researchers recognising that BJW is not monolithic but rather comprises distinct
dimensions that operate differently across contexts and predict divergent psychological and
behavioural outcomes (Furnham, 2003).
The most critical distinction within BJW conceptualisations concerns the differentiation between
personal BJW and general BJW. Personal BJW refers to the belief that the world is just for oneself
specifically, that one's own efforts and actions will be fairly rewarded, and that one gets what one
deserves as an individual. General BJW, in contrast, refers to the belief that the world is just for
others and for people in general, that outcomes are fair and deserved even when observing others'
circumstances (Sutton & Douglass, 2020). What differentiates these dimensions is fundamentally the
target of the justice belief. Personal BJW is self-referential and operates as a personal resource that
motivates individual effort, whereas general BJW is other-referential and operates as an ideological
framework for interpreting social inequality. Research has consistently demonstrated that these two
dimensions have divergent psychological consequences; personal BJW is positively associated with
well-being, motivation, and prosocial action, while general BJW is more strongly associated with
victim-blaming, justification of inequality, and reduced support for redistributive policies (Stroebe,
Postmes, Täuber & van Prooijen, 2015).
The study of BJW holds particular significance within the South African context, a nation
characterised by a complex history of apartheid-era systemic injustice, ongoing socioeconomic
inequality, and contemporary efforts toward social justice and reconciliation. South Africa is
consistently ranked as one of the most unequal countries in the world, with vast disparities in income,
wealth, access to quality education, healthcare, housing, and employment opportunities persisting
along racial lines decades after the formal end of apartheid (Radebe, 2025). Within this context,
understanding how BJW operates becomes critically important for addressing victim-blaming,
justifying inequality, and predicting support for social justice movements. The project description
notes that support for justice movements can be measured across multiple levels including
ideological support, donation behaviour, and participation in South African social justice movements
addressing gender justice, trade unions, environmental justice, and service delivery. Understanding
how personal and general BJW relate to support for these movements is essential for predicting who
will engage in collective action to address injustice versus who will oppose such efforts.