Moral self-licensing effect: When virtuous behavior facilitates immoral behavior

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.55414/ap.v39i3.909

Keywords:

moral self-licensing, moral credentials, moral behavior, moral consistency

Abstract

Empirical research over the past two decades, conducted primarily with samples from the U.S. and Western Europe, reveals that acting virtuously can subsequently cause people to act in a morally more dubious way. This phenomenon has been called the moral self-licensing effect. In this article we review the empirical evidence on this effect, as well as the theoretical explanations that have been proposed for it: the model of moral credentials and the credit model, which includes the theory of self-regulation and the theory of completion. Then, we analize the problem of the possible contradiction between this effect and the tendency to moral self-consistence. Finally, we examine the strength of the effect and to what extent it is generalizable to different cultures. The article closes with a section of conclusions in which the implications of the phenomenon are discussed.

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Published

29/12/2021 — Updated on 11/04/2022

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Research articles

How to Cite

Bilbao, I., Conejero, & Pascual Jimeno, A. (2022). Moral self-licensing effect: When virtuous behavior facilitates immoral behavior. Apuntes De Psicología, 39(3), 133-141. https://doi.org/10.55414/ap.v39i3.909 (Original work published 2021)

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