Harassment Analysis Series — Psychology and Social BehaviorJustification Language / Perpetrator Cognition / Self-Exculpatory Asymmetry This working paper offers a conceptual analysis of the "justification language" deployed in low-awareness workplace harm—expressions such as "that's normal," "everyone does it," and "it's for your own good." The analysis proceeds across two dimensions: perpetrator cognition, in which justification language is connected to moral disengagement, social categorization, and self-exculpatory asymmetry; and institutional blindness, the organizational and interactional conditions through which such language is sustained and insulated from scrutiny. The paper presents no empirical data; it is an exploratory contribution to social psychological and organizational theory. Version 2.0 substantially expands the working paper. The original five justification language patterns are retained and reframed as the perpetrator-cognition dimension, while a new institutional-blindness dimension is introduced, encompassing the formalization of training, the pacification of consultation channels, organizational defense, and institutional betrayal. A mutual reinforcement model linking the two dimensions, together with implications for the theory of social behaviour, is newly developed in this version. Developed with AI assistance (ChatGPT, Claude, and Grok) for argument organization and language refinement; all analysis and conclusions are the author's own.
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