An Integrated Model of Legal and Moral Reasoning and Rule-Violating Behavior

The Role of Legal Attitudes

  • Cohn, Ellen S.
  • Bucolo, Donald
  • Rebellon, Cesar J.
  • Van Gundy, Karen
Law & Human Behavior 34(4):p 295-309, August 2010. | DOI: 10.1007/s10979-009-9185-9

Abstract

Legal socialization theory predicts that attitudes mediate the relation between legal reasoning and rule-violating behavior [. Legal Socialization: A Study of Norms and Rules. New York: Springer-Verlag]. Moral development theory predicts that moral reasoning predicts rule-violating behavior directly as well as indirectly [. Bridging moral cognition and moral action: A critical review of the literature. Psychological Bulletin, 88, 1–45]. We present and test an integrated model of rule-violating behavior drawing on both theories in a longitudinal study of middle school and high school students. Students completed questionnaires three times during the course of 1 year at 6-month intervals. Legal and moral reasoning, legal attitudes, and rule-violating behavior were measured at times one, two, and three respectively. Structural equation models revealed that while moral and legal reasoning were directly and indirectly related to rule-violating behavior among high school students, legal reasoning bore no direct relation to rule-violating behavior among middle school students. The implications for an integrated model of reasoning and rule-violating behavior are discussed.

Copyright © 2010 by the American Psychological Association