Batson Et Al (2002) Four Motives For Community Involvement
Batson Et Al (2002) Four Motives For Community Involvement
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Journal of Social Issues, Vol. 58, No. 3, 2002, pp. 429--445
Jo-Ann Tsang
Southern Methodist University
the level of concern for the welfare of other individuals in the community and of the
community as a whole. Failures to act for the common good are conspicuous: trash-
littered public parks, streets, and highways; polluted rivers and streams; dropping
water tables and shrinking reservoirs; reduced social services and underfunded
schools; undersubscribed organ donor and big brother/big sister programs; and
insufficient funds for the local humane society, symphony, and public TV.
The mayor is well-aware that these failures are only half of the picture. There
are times when people in town do act for the common good. They do at times
pick up litter, recycle, carpool, and vote. Many who can, do contribute to public
TV and the United Way. Many help their neighbors in need, and if able, serve
as volunteers in hospitals, nursing homes, AIDS hospices, and fire departments.
But not enough is being done. The mayor wants to know what can be done to
increase the likelihood that people in town will act in ways that benefit others in
the community and the community as a whole.
The mayor calls such action community involvement or acting for the com-
mon good; we will too. The mayor wants to know: Should there be a new school
program? If so, what sort of program—a new civics class, character education,
optional or required community service? And at what level—primary grades, sec-
ondary grades, or college? Should there be an inquiry and report to the town
council? Should there first be a survey of the populace to identify perceived needs
and possible solutions? Should there be an ad campaign (“Just say yes!” perhaps)?
Should whatever is done emerge from self-identified communities of mutual in-
terest within the larger community? The mayor is asking for our advice.
Initial panic on our part. Once we catch our breath and regain a little com-
posure, some thoughts begin to form. First and foremost is the conviction that
although we would love to be able to provide the direction the mayor is seeking,
we cannot—at least not by ourselves. The puzzle is too big and complex. We can,
we believe, provide a piece or two needed to solve the puzzle, but there are many
other pieces that must come from others. The mayor—or someone else—will have
to put all of these pieces together.
The pieces that we can provide concern motives that might lead a person to act
for the common good. We can, and shall, offer the mayor a conceptual framework
for thinking about these motives. First, however, we need to specify what we mean
when we speak of motives.
Relating motives to values and goals. Following Kurt Lewin (1951), we view
motives as goal-directed forces induced by threats or opportunities related to one’s
values. Values can be defined, most generally, as relative preferences; Mary values
State A over State B if she would consistently choose State A over State B, with all
other things being equal. If a negative discrepancy is perceived between a current
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Four Motives for Community Involvement 431
or anticipated state and a valued state, then obtaining or maintaining the valued
state is likely to become a goal. If, for example, you value having bicycle paths on
which to ride, then approval of a proposed plan to create them in your community
is likely to be a goal, which will in turn induce motivation directed toward reaching
this goal. This motivation may lead you to collect signatures in support of the plan.
Focusing on motives, not only behavior. A major implication that both Lewin
(1951) and Heider (1958) wished to draw from the distinctions among ultimate
goals, instrumental goals, and unintended consequences was the importance of
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432 Batson, Ahmad, and Tsang
focusing one’s attention on motives rather than on behavior, even if one’s goal
is to increase a type of behavior, such as community involvement. Behavior is
highly variable. Whether a given behavior will occur in a given situation depends
on the strength of some motive that might evoke that behavior as well as on (a) the
strength of complementary and competing motives, if any, (b) how the behavior
relates to each of these, and (c) the other behavioral options available in the situation
at the time. As in the examples cited above, the more directly a given behavior
promotes an ultimate goal, and the more uniquely it does so among the behavioral
options available, the more likely it is to occur when the value underlying that
motive is activated by threat or opportunity. In contrast, behavior that promotes
an instrumental goal can easily change as the behavioral options to reach that
goal change, or as the causal association between the instrumental and ultimate
goals changes. Behavior that is an unintended consequence can easily change as
the behavioral options change, unless this behavior is inextricably linked to some
other behavior that directly and uniquely promotes the ultimate goal. Invariance—
and explanatory stability—is found not in behavior but in the underlying link of a
given motive to its ultimate goal (Lewin, 1951).
act for the common good needs to consider all four. It needs to consider not only
the existence of all four but also their interplay. For a given individual in a given
situation, more than one of these motives may be present at once. When this is
the case, the motives may either conflict or cooperate with one another. Before
considering their interplay, however, let us say a little more about each of these
motives as a basis for community involvement. Table 1 provides an overview of
our analysis.
Egoism is the most obvious motive for acting for the common good. Action
that serves the common good can be egoistically motivated if this action either
is instrumental to reaching the ultimate goal of self-benefit, or is an unintended
consequence of reaching this goal. For example, a philanthropist may endow a
hospital or university to gain recognition and a form of immortality; a capitalist,
nudged by Adam Smith’s (1776/1976) Invisible Hand, may create jobs and enhance
the standard of living of the community while motivated by a relentless pursuit of
personal fortune; a student may volunteer at a local nursing home to add community
service to her résumé. All three are egoistically motivated; yet the action of each
may benefit the community. Reflecting on what motives might induce people to act
for the common good, ecologist and social-policy analyst Garrett Hardin (1977)
concluded that egoism is not simply the most obvious. He concluded that it is
the only motive sufficiently pervasive and powerful to do the job. Hence, Hardin
proposed his Cardinal Rule of Policy: “Never ask a person to act against his own
self-interest” (p. 27).
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Four Motives for Community Involvement 435
Promise and problems of egoism as a source of action for the common good.
Egoistic motives offer promise for promoting the common good because they are
easily aroused and are potent. They offer problems because they are fickle. If the
egoistically motivated individual finds that self-interest can be served as well or
better without enhancing the common good, then the common good be damned.
For example, the student whose ultimate goal in volunteering at a local nursing
home is to add community service to her résumé is not likely to last. Her goal has
been reached the first time she enters the building.
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436 Batson, Ahmad, and Tsang
Hardin quickly returned to his Cardinal Rule: Never ask a person to act against
self-interest.
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Four Motives for Community Involvement 437
benefit the group. This action may, in turn, benefit the community as a whole (for
further discussion, see Batson, 1994).
The college student who volunteers to help Habitat for Humanity build houses
and whose ultimate goal is easing the plight of the poor is displaying collectivist
motivation. So is the gay man who, in order to serve the gay community, volunteers
to serve as buddy for someone dying of AIDS. If the person’s ultimate goal is to
benefit some group, whether large or small, inclusive or exclusive, the motive is
collectivism.
people do not seek to maximize only their own welfare. They seek also to enhance
the group welfare (Alfano & Marwell, 1980; Brewer & Kramer, 1986; Dawes,
McTavish, & Shaklee, 1977; Kramer & Brewer, 1984; Orbell, van de Kragt, &
Dawes, 1988; Yamagishi & Sato, 1986). The most common explanation for this
attention to group welfare is in terms of collectivist motivation. It is claimed that
under conditions of group identity, individuals can and do act with an ultimate
goal of increasing the welfare of their group (e.g., Brewer & Kramer, 1986; Dawes
et al., 1990). Whether it is possible to induce such a motive in someone who is not
a member of the group is, however, less clear.
Principlism is motivation with the ultimate goal of upholding some moral prin-
ciple, such as justice (Batson, 1994). It is not surprising that most moral philoso-
phers have argued for the importance of a motive to act for common good other
than egoism. But most since Kant (1785/1898) have also argued for a motive other
than altruism and collectivism. Moral philosophers reject appeals to altruism based
on feelings of empathy, sympathy, and compassion because they find these emo-
tions too fickle and circumscribed; they reject appeals to collectivism because it
is bounded by the limits of the collective. These philosophers typically call for
motivation with a goal of upholding some universal and impartial moral principle.
For example, philosopher John Rawls (1971) has argued for a principle of
justice based on the allocation of goods to the members of society from an initial
position behind the Veil of Ignorance, where no one knows his or her place in
society—prince or pauper, laborer or lawyer, male or female, Black or White. Why
does Rawls require such a stance? Because it eliminates partiality and seduction
by special interest.
Calls to act for the common good often appeal to principle. We are told that
it is our duty to vote, that it is not right to leave our litter in the park for someone
else to clean up, that we should give our “fair share” to the United Way, that we
ought to improve the community in which we live.
is not wrong. The abstractness of most moral principles, and their multiplicity,
makes rationalization easy (Bandura, 1991; Tsang, in press). Skill in dodging
the thrust of the moral principles we espouse may explain the weak empirical
relation between principled morality and social action (Blasi, 1980). Perhaps moral
principles serve more to censure or extol others’ actions than to motivate our own.
Perhaps adherence to moral principles is only an instrumental goal on the way to the
egoistic ultimate goal of benefiting ourselves by avoiding social and self-censure
or gaining social- and self-esteem.
It is not that we lack moral sensibility; most of us consider ourselves to
be highly moral (Sedikides & Strube, 1997; Van Lange, 1991). Yet when our
own interest is best served by violating avowed moral principles, we may find
this relatively easy to do. We find ways to see ourselves as fair—or at least
not unfair—while avoiding the cost to self of actually being fair. Moral princi-
ples are affirmed, but the motivation to uphold these principles seems spotty and
weak.
A number of psychological processes may contribute to this weakness of
moral motivation. First, people may conveniently forget to think about their moral
principles if such an omission serves their own interests (Bersoff, 1999). Second,
people may actively rationalize (Tsang, in press), convincing themselves that their
moral principles do not apply either to the specific others whose interests con-
flict with their own (moral exclusion—Staub, 1990) or to the specific situation
(moral disengagement—Bandura, 1991). Third, people may deceive themselves
into believing that they have acted morally even when they have not if there is
sufficient ambiguity to allow them to appear moral without having to be moral
(moral hypocrisy—Batson, Kobrynowicz, Dinnerstein, Kampf, & Wilson, 1997).
Conflict
In sum, we can offer both good news and bad to our imaginary mayor. The
good news is the existence of motives for community involvement other than
self-interest, making available new resources. The bad news is that recognizing a
multiplicity of motives complicates matters. The different motives for acting for
the common good do not always work in harmony. As long as the welfare of self,
others, and the community are perceived to be distinct, motives to promote the
welfare of each can undercut or compete with one another.
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Four Motives for Community Involvement 441
Orchestrating Cooperation
Each of the four motives for community involvement that we have identified
has its strengths. Each also has its weaknesses. The potential for the greatest
good may come from strategies that orchestrate motives so that the strengths
of one can overcome weaknesses of another. Strategies that combine appeals to
either altruism or collectivism with appeals to principle seem especially promising.
Upholding a moral principle like justice may be a motive with broad relevance, but
it is vulnerable to rationalization. Empathy-induced altruism and collectivism are
potentially powerful other-oriented motives, but are limited in scope; they produce
partiality, special concern for a particular person or persons or for a particular group.
Perhaps if we can lead people to feel empathy for the victims of injustice, or to
perceive themselves in a common group with them, then we can get these motives
working together rather than at odds. Desire for justice may provide perspective
and reason; empathy-induced altruism or collectivism may provide emotional fire
and a push toward seeing the victims’ suffering end, preventing rationalization.
Something of this sort occurred, we believe, in a number of rescuers of Jews
in Nazi Europe. A careful look at data collected by Samuel and Pearl Oliner
and their colleagues (Oliner & Oliner, 1988) suggests that involvement in rescue
activity frequently began with concern for a specific individual or individuals, or
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442 Batson, Ahmad, and Tsang
Conclusion
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Four Motives for Community Involvement 445
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DAN BATSON received his PhD in Psychology from Princeton University and
is now Professor of Psychology at the University of Kansas. He has conducted a
number of experiments on various forms of prosocial motivation, is the author of
The Altruism Question: Toward a Social-Psychological Answer (Erlbaum Asso-
ciates, 1991), and the chapter in The Handbook of Social Psychology (4th ed.) on
“Altruism and Prosocial Behavior” (McGraw-Hill, 1998).
JO-ANN TSANG received her PhD in Psychology from the University of Kansas.
She is currently a postdoctoral research associate at Southern Methodist University.
Her research interests are in the area of Social Psychology, and include moral
rationalization and moral motivation, forgiveness, gratitude, and the psychology
of religion.