Understanding prosocial and antisocial behaviours: The roles of self‐focused and other‐focused motivational orientations

Abstract We examine how individual differences in self‐focused and other‐focused orientations relate to prosocial (e.g., helping, volunteerism) and antisocial (e.g., theft, violence) behaviours/attitudes. Using four datasets (total N  = 176,216; across 78 countries), we find that other‐focused orien...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inEuropean journal of social psychology
Main Authors Joyal‐Desmarais, Keven, Euh, Hyun, Scharmer, Alexandra, Snyder, Mark
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 18.09.2024
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Abstract We examine how individual differences in self‐focused and other‐focused orientations relate to prosocial (e.g., helping, volunteerism) and antisocial (e.g., theft, violence) behaviours/attitudes. Using four datasets (total N  = 176,216; across 78 countries), we find that other‐focused orientations (e.g., socially focused values, intimacy motivation, compassionate/communal traits) generally relate positively to prosocial outcomes and negatively to antisocial outcomes. These effects are highly consistent cross‐nationally and across multiple ways of operationalizing constructs. In contrast, self‐focused orientations (e.g., personally focused values, power motivation, assertive/agentic traits) tend to relate positively to both antisocial and prosocial outcomes. However, associations with prosocial outcomes vary substantially across nations and construct operationalizations. Overall, the effects of other‐focused orientations are consistently larger than those of self‐focused orientations. We discuss the implications of these findings for interventions that target self‐focused and other‐focused motivations to influence prosocial and antisocial outcomes.
ISSN:0046-2772
1099-0992
DOI:10.1002/ejsp.3110