Abstract

Adolescents’ aggressive behavior has been often linked to biases in morality. However, limited knowledge is available regarding the relative strength of different moral correlates, both at the individual and class-level, in predicting different types of aggressive behavior over time. To address this gap, the present study tested the prospective associations of moral identity and moral disengagement with reactive and proactive aggression in a short-term longitudinal study. The sample consisted of 1158 Italian adolescents (48.7% females; Mage = 13.6 years, SD = 1.1). Participants completed self-report measures of moral identity, moral disengagement, perceived collective moral disengagement in the fall, and reactive and proactive aggression in the fall and in the spring. Multivariate multilevel analysis indicated that, at the individual level, after controlling for the stability of aggressive behavior, T2 (Time 2) reactive aggression was higher for students who reported lower moral identity and higher moral disengagement at T1 (Time 1). For proactive aggression, a significant interaction effect indicated that the negative association between T1 moral identity and T2 aggression was apparent only at high levels of T1 moral disengagement. Moreover, proactive aggression was significantly predicted by higher perceived collective moral disengagement. At the class-level, T1 collective moral disengagement helped explain between-class variability of T2 reactive and proactive aggressive behavior. How these results expand previous research on morality and aggressive behavior and their potential implications for prevention and intervention programs is discussed.

Highlights

  • Risk factors for the development of aggressive behavior toward peers have been studied for decades (Lansford, 2018)

  • We focused on adolescence because in this developmental period most youth have internalized a suite of moral rules (Marshall & Marshall, 2018) and developed a moral identity (Krettenauer & Victor, 2017); the association between moral disengagement and aggressive behavior is stronger among adolescents than among children (Gini, Pozzoli, & Hymel, 2014)

  • It is essential that a whole-school approach involving each of the classes in the school is used as our research shows that was individual level moral disengagement associated with aggression, but collective moral disengagement was longitudinally predictive, over six months, of reactive and proactive aggression

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Summary

Objectives

Multilevel approach, this study aimed to test the prospective associations of adolescents’ moral identity and moral disengagement, the latter measured both as an individual trait-like characteristic and as a class-level, collective dimension, with adolescents’ aggressive behavior over six months. The lack of integrated models that test the interplay of moral disengagement with other moral dimensions, such as moral identity, is a clear gap in the literature that this study aims to fill. While this moderation effect was found in a cross-sectional study, this study aimed to replicate this pattern longitudinally. At the end of data collection, any questions about the content of the questionnaires or the general aims of the study were answered

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