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Institutional Legitimacy and Procedural Justice: Reexamining the Question of Causality

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 April 2024

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Abstract

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Tyler and Rasinski (1991) challenge Gibson's (1989) contention that perceptions of procedural justice do not influence citizens' compliance with unpopular Supreme Court rulings. Noting a significant correlation between procedural justice and institutional legitimacy, Tyler and Rasinski argue that perceptions of procedural justice exert indirect influence on compliance. In response, Gibson (1991) questions Tyler and Rasinski's interpretation of the causal relationship linking institutional legitimacy and perceptions of procedural justice. Although both sides in this dispute offer persuasive discussion, neither can advance conclusive empirical evidence regarding the question of causality. This note presents a reexamination of the relationship between institutional legitimacy and procedural justice, with data drawn from an experiment designed specifically to address the question of causality. Results do not enable conclusive assessment of the Gibson hypothesis. However, in contrast to the Tyler-Rasinski hypothesis, no evidence is found supporting the contention that perceptions of procedural justice influence perceptions of institutional legitimacy.

Type
Research Note
Copyright
Copyright © 1993 by The Law and Society Association

Footnotes

Data reported here were collected for the author by the University Center for Social and Urban Research at the University of Pittsburgh. The assistance of Laurie Fowler in supervising data collection is gratefully acknowledged.

References

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