RT Article T1 Hope and positive religious coping as predictors of social justice commitment JF Mental health, religion & culture VO 17 IS 6 SP 557 OP 567 A1 Sandage, Steven J. A1 Morgan, Jonathan LA English PB Taylor & Francis YR 2014 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1838992472 AB The present study tested a theoretical model of dispositional hope and positive religious coping as unique predictors of social justice commitment over and above impression management in a sample of graduate students (N = 214) in helping professions at an Evangelical Protestant university in the USA. This empirical study utilised a cultural psychology approach with a theoretical framework developed from (a) an earlier cultural psychology study of hope and social justice using the social philosophies of Martin Luther King, Jr, Cornel West, and Paulo Freire and (b) several liberation and Pietistic theologians. Results supported the discriminant validity hypothesis with dispositional hope and positive religious coping each predicting social justice commitment over and above a measure of spiritual impression management. Implications are considered for contextually sensitive training and future empirical and interdisciplinary research on social justice commitment. K1 cultural psychology K1 Hope K1 Religious Coping K1 Social Justice K1 Spirituality K1 Training DO 10.1080/13674676.2013.864266