Angela Schneider
University of Trier
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Angela Schneider.
Social Justice Research | 1989
Leo Montada; Angela Schneider
Various attitutidinal, cognitive, emotional, and actional reactions to problems and needs of less fortunate people (unemployed, poor people in the developing countries, foreign workers in West Germany) were assessed in a questionnaire study with 865 respondents. The external validity of self-report data was established by external ratings. The focus was on emotional reactions (existential guilt, sympathy, moral outrage because of unjust disadvantages, anger about the disadvantaged, contentment with ones own advantages, fear of losing these, hopelessness with respect to the fate of the less fortunate). Several justice-related variables (beliefs, views, appraisals) as well as responsibility-related variables and social attitudes were assessed as predictors of emotions. The importance of justice-related variables for the arousal of different social emotions was clearly shown. The use and usefulness of cognitive models of discrete emotions is discussed. The impact of emotions on the readiness to various forms of prosocial activities in favor of the less fortunate was also shown: Moral outrage and existential guilt proved to be much more salient predictors than sympathy. Crucial differences between these three prosocial emotions as well as the impact of justice-related variables on readiness to prosocial activities are discussed.
Archive | 1998
Barbara Reichle; Angela Schneider; Leo Montada
Individuals have a need to believe that they live in a world where people generally get what they deserve. The belief that the world is just enables the individual to confront his physical and social environment as though they were stable and orderly. Without such a belief it would be difficult for the individual to commit himself to the pursuit of long-range goals or even to the socially regulated behavior of day-to-day life. Since the belief that the world is just serves such an important adaptive function for the individual, people are very reluctant to give up this belief, and they can be greatly troubled if they encounter evidence that suggest that the world is not really just or orderly after all” (Lerner & Miller, 1978, pp. 1030–1031).
Archive | 1998
Barbara Reichle; Angela Schneider
Archive | 2006
Claudia Dalbert; Leo Montada; Manfred Schmitt; Angela Schneider
Archive | 2006
Leo Montada; Angela Schneider
Archive | 2006
Angela Schneider; Barbara Reichle; Leo Montada
Archive | 2006
Leo Montada; Angela Schneider
Archive | 2006
Angela Schneider; A. Meißner; Leo Montada; Barbara Reichle
Archive | 2006
Leo Montada; Angela Schneider; A. Meißner
Archive | 2006
Angela Schneider; Leo Montada; Barbara Reichle; A. Meißner