Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Administrative Obedience -
Meeus & Raaijmakers, 1985
- Aim
- Carried out in the Netherlands, 20 years after Milgrims study
- More liberal culture
- Test obedience where harm could be done, but with violence typical of our time - less physical, more psychological
- Procedure
- Based on Milgrim
- Researcher orders naive participant to do something harmful to another person
- Ordered to harass a job applicant, in order to make him nervous while he was sitting a test to determine whether he would get the job
- Told that this was in the context of a research project
- Results
- 92% of participants obeyed and disturbed and criticised the applicant when told to do so by the researcher
- They thought it was unfair and didn't want to do it, but still did
- Variations
- Removing researcher
- Obedience dropped
- Introducing 2 rebellious peers for participant
- Obedience dropped
- Conclusion
- Even in a more liberal culture, people obeyed an
authority figure and went against their better nature
to do something designed to harm another person
- Evaluation
- Validity
- Ecological
- Yes, as this kind of psychological violence is
more in tune with the time than physical violence
- No, as still unlikely scenario
- Population
- Dutch adults from general population, is representative
- Results consistent with other tests in Europe
- Results
support
Milgrims
findings,
suggesting
it is a
genuine
effect of
recognising
authority