Awards



  


The Lifetime Achievement Award of the International Society for Justice Research

This award is presented bi-annually to honor distinguished lifetime contributions to the scientific study of justice and for efforts to advance justice as a field of study.

Lifetime Achievement Award Winners:

2008    Morton Deutsch

       Melvin Lerner

2010    Leo Montada

2008 Lifetime Achievement Award Addresses

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Video 1: Mel Lerner

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Video 2: Morton Deutsch



Early Career Contribution Award of the International Society of Justice Research

This award is presented bi-annually to an accomplished young researcher. This award is made to foster, encourage, and support excellence in justice-related scholarship. Recipients of this award may not have held a PhD for more than 10 years. 

Early Career Contribution Award Winners:
2006: Jan-Willem van Prooijen
2008: David De Cremer
2010: Aaron Kay


Morton Deutsch Award of the International Society of Justice Research

The International Society for Justice Research will present this award annually for the best article published in Social Justice Research every year, with preference given to contributions from investigators who are early in their research careers.  The award is named after one of the society’s most prolific and influential contributors, Morton Deutsch.

The winner will be chosen by a committee that includes the editor-in-chief and two associate editors of Social Justice Research.

2004 Winner: Nilanjana (Buju) Dasgupta: “Implicit Ingroup Favoritism, Outgroup Favoritism, and Their Behavioral Manifestations.”  Social Justice Research, 17, 143-169.

2005 Winner: Laurie T. O’Brien & Christian S. Crandall: “Perceiving Self-Interest: Power, Ideology, and Maintenance of the Status Quo.”  Social Justice Research, 18, 1-24.

2006 Winner:  Sarah F. Brosnan: “Nonhuman species’ reactions to inequity and their implications for fairness.” Social Justice Research, 19, 153-185.

2006 Honorable Mention: Michael Wenzel: “A letter from the tax office: Compliance effects on informational and interactional fairness.” Social Justice Research, 19, 354 – 364.

2007 Winner: Jonathan Haidt and Jesse Graham: “When morality opposes justice: Conservatives have moral intuitions that liberals may not recognize.” Social Justice Research, 20, 98-116.

2007 Honorable Mention: Mitchell J. Callan, Nathaniel G. Powell, and John H. Ellard: 
“The consequences of victim physical attractiveness on reactions to injustice: The role of observers' belief in a just world.” Social Justice Research, 20, 433-456.

2008 Winner: Felicia Pratto, Adam Pearson, I-Ching Lee, and Tamar Saguy: "Power Dynamics in an Experimental Game." Social Justice Research, 21, 377-407.

2009 Winner: Christopher M. Federico, Corrie V. Hunt., and Damla Ergun for their article "Political Expertise, Social Wordviews, and Ideology: Translating 'Competitive Jungles' and 'Dangerous Worlds' into Ideological Reality". Social Justice Research, 22, 259-279.



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Last changes April 2010
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