The moral license of a click: how social observability and impression management tendencies moderate the effects of online clicktivism on donation behavior
Token acts of online support, also known as clicktivism, have received much criticism in recent years for suppressing subsequent prosocial behavior. However, whether, when, and why individuals perform less prosocial behavior following these acts remains relatively unknown. To address these questions...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1689532023-06-23T07:49:44Z The moral license of a click: how social observability and impression management tendencies moderate the effects of online clicktivism on donation behavior Kim, Nuri Kim, Hye Kyung Tan, Si Jin Wang, Kelvin Wen Hsing Ong, Kheng Hian Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information Social sciences::Communication Clicktivism Slacktivism Token acts of online support, also known as clicktivism, have received much criticism in recent years for suppressing subsequent prosocial behavior. However, whether, when, and why individuals perform less prosocial behavior following these acts remains relatively unknown. To address these questions, we designed a lab experiment in which participants (N = 193) were randomly assigned to engage in public, private, or no act of clicktivism. Consistent with moral self-licensing theory, those who signed an online petition were less likely to donate than those who did not sign any petition. Public clicktivism (compared to private clicktivism) increased donation intentions among those with high impression management tendencies (i.e. high self-monitors). Concerns about one’s moral self-image partially mediated these effects. Theoretical and practical implications of these findings are discussed. 2023-06-23T07:49:43Z 2023-06-23T07:49:43Z 2023 Journal Article Kim, N., Kim, H. K., Tan, S. J., Wang, K. W. H. & Ong, K. H. (2023). The moral license of a click: how social observability and impression management tendencies moderate the effects of online clicktivism on donation behavior. New Media and Society, 146144482311539-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1177/14614448231153971 1461-4448 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168953 10.1177/14614448231153971 2-s2.0-85149937966 146144482311539 en New Media and Society © 2023 The Author(s). All rights reserved. |
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Social sciences::Communication Clicktivism Slacktivism Kim, Nuri Kim, Hye Kyung Tan, Si Jin Wang, Kelvin Wen Hsing Ong, Kheng Hian The moral license of a click: how social observability and impression management tendencies moderate the effects of online clicktivism on donation behavior |
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Token acts of online support, also known as clicktivism, have received much criticism in recent years for suppressing subsequent prosocial behavior. However, whether, when, and why individuals perform less prosocial behavior following these acts remains relatively unknown. To address these questions, we designed a lab experiment in which participants (N = 193) were randomly assigned to engage in public, private, or no act of clicktivism. Consistent with moral self-licensing theory, those who signed an online petition were less likely to donate than those who did not sign any petition. Public clicktivism (compared to private clicktivism) increased donation intentions among those with high impression management tendencies (i.e. high self-monitors). Concerns about one’s moral self-image partially mediated these effects. Theoretical and practical implications of these findings are discussed. |
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Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information |
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Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information Kim, Nuri Kim, Hye Kyung Tan, Si Jin Wang, Kelvin Wen Hsing Ong, Kheng Hian |
format |
Article |
author |
Kim, Nuri Kim, Hye Kyung Tan, Si Jin Wang, Kelvin Wen Hsing Ong, Kheng Hian |
author_sort |
Kim, Nuri |
title |
The moral license of a click: how social observability and impression management tendencies moderate the effects of online clicktivism on donation behavior |
title_short |
The moral license of a click: how social observability and impression management tendencies moderate the effects of online clicktivism on donation behavior |
title_full |
The moral license of a click: how social observability and impression management tendencies moderate the effects of online clicktivism on donation behavior |
title_fullStr |
The moral license of a click: how social observability and impression management tendencies moderate the effects of online clicktivism on donation behavior |
title_full_unstemmed |
The moral license of a click: how social observability and impression management tendencies moderate the effects of online clicktivism on donation behavior |
title_sort |
moral license of a click: how social observability and impression management tendencies moderate the effects of online clicktivism on donation behavior |
publishDate |
2023 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168953 |
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1772825245810425856 |