Abstract

PurposeBandura’s theory of moral disengagement explains how otherwise ethical persons can behave immorally. We examined whether a trait model of general personality and the “dark triad” underlay moral disengagement, the relationship these constructs have to unethical consumer attitudes, and whether moral disengagement provided incremental validity in the prediction of antisocial behaviour. MethodsSelf-report data were obtained from a community sample of 380 adults via an online survey that administered all measures. ResultsCorrelations between unethical consumer attitudes, lower Agreeableness, lower Conscientiousness, higher moral disengagement, higher psychopathy, and higher Machiavellianism were captured by a single factor. When this broad factor was examined using regression, demographic, personality and the dark triad traits all predicted moral disengagement, specific influences being age, education, Intellect, psychopathy, and Machiavellianism. A similar model examining predictors of unethical consumer attitudes again found all blocks contributed to the outcome, with specific influence provided by age, Intellect, and moral disengagement, the latter showing incremental validity as a predictor of unethical consumer attitudes. ConclusionsMoral disengagement is based on low Agreeableness, Machiavellianism and psychopathic-type traits, but provides incremental validity in predicting antisocial attitudes to a trait model alone. Narcissism is neither related to moral disengagement, nor unethical consumer attitudes.

Highlights

  • Bandura's theory of moral disengagement explains how otherwise ethical persons can behave immorally

  • The current study investigated the relationships between general personality traits, the Dark Triad (DT), moral disengagement, and unethical consumer attitudes

  • Significant separate correlations between unethical consumer attitudes, lower Agreeableness, lower Conscientiousness, higher moral disengagement, higher psychopathy, and higher Machiavellianism were captured by a single factor capturing all of the more unpleasant variance in the data set

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Summary

Introduction

Bandura's theory of moral disengagement explains how otherwise ethical persons can behave immorally. Moore, Detert, Treviño, Baker and Mayer (2012) subsequently found positive significant associations between moral disengagement, selfreported unethical behaviour, and self-reported decisions to commit fraud While these results are salutary, few studies have examined more fundamental influences underpinning moral disengagement or it’s correlates, for example, the Five-Factor / Big Five Models of personality (FFM/BFM; McCrae & John, 1992; Goldberg, 1999), or the negative dispositional traits found within the Dark Triad (Paulhus & Williams, 2002)

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