Relationships between Identification With All Humanity and Universalism and Benevolence: The importance of distinguishing interpersonal and ideological prosocial values.
Relationships between Identification With All Humanity and Universalism and Benevolence: The importance of distinguishing interpersonal and ideological prosocial values.
StatusVoR
Alternative title
Authors
Nezlek, John
Hamer, Katarzyna
Wlodarczyk, Anna
Monograph
Monograph (alternative title)
Date
2026-02
Publisher
Journal title
International Journal of Psychology
Issue
1
Volume
61
Pages
Pages
1-8
ISSN
0020-7594
ISSN of series
Weblink
Access date
2026-02-10
Abstract PL
Abstract EN
In three studies conducted in the United States (n=598), Poland (n=1000) andChile(n=311),wemeasuredparticipants’ Identification With All Humanity and their endorsement of Universalist and Benevolent values as defined by Schwartz and colleagues. In all three studies, when IWAH scores were regressed onto values scores, IWAH scores were significantly (positively) related to the endorsement of Universalism values and were not significantly related to the endorsement of Benevolence values. With one exception, this was also true for the subscales of the two measures of values. The present results confirm a recent model of prosociality that distinguishes ideological and interpersonal prosociality. Although Universalism and Benevolence are both prosocial values, they refer to different domains of prosociality, ideological and interpersonal respectively, and IWAH is related to the former but not to the latter.
Abstract other
Keywords PL
Keywords EN
benevolence
human values
identification with all humanity
prosociality
universalism
human values
identification with all humanity
prosociality
universalism