The human mind operates with a deep need for justice; this need is not merely an ethical principle but part of the brain’s core safety architecture. Fair treatment activates the brain’s reward circuits, while injustice triggers the threat system (Tabibnia & Lieberman, 2007). Therefore, being wronged is not simply a violation of rules—it creates a micro-fracture in one’s sense of self. After experiencing injustice, individuals do not only ask “What happened?” but also “Why wasn’t I protected?” and “Does my worth not matter?”
This article examines the neuropsychological foundations of injustice, the psychodynamic cycles that shape the search for fairness, and the pathways toward healing, grounded in contemporary scientific evidence.
1. The Brain’s Justice Mechanism
Fairness elicits a measurable reward response in the brain. Ventral striatum activation has been observed when individuals receive fair offers (Tabibnia & Lieberman, 2007). In contrast, unfairness activates regions associated with “social pain,” such as the anterior insula and anterior cingulate cortex (Tabibnia & Lieberman, 2008). Thus, injustice literally hurts—the phrase “it felt painful” is biologically accurate.
Recent studies show that perceived injustice is closely intertwined with physical processes as well. For example, among individuals living with chronic pain, higher levels of perceived injustice are linked to poorer pain regulation and delayed recovery (Carriere et al., 2018). This confirms that injustice is not only a psychological experience but also a somatic one.
2. Emotional Stages Of Experiencing Injustice
The emotional trajectory following injustice is not linear; people often cycle between stages. Still, clinical observations and theoretical work highlight several recurring phases:
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Shock / Denial: The person struggles to make sense of what happened. In contexts involving power imbalance, self-blame often emerges.
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Anger: One of the most potent emotional reactions produced by injustice; it reflects an effort to protect one’s sense of integrity (Bies, 2024).
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Shame: In close relationships, injustice can invalidate one’s lived experience—what the literature calls epistemic injustice.
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Isolation: The absence of witnesses creates a secondary trauma; the feeling of “not being seen” intensifies.
These stages can leave lasting imprints on one’s self-worth and identity.
3. The Psychological Cost Of Seeking Justice
After being wronged, the mind often clings to an “open case file.” As long as this file remains unresolved, rumination and the search for control intensify.
In this heightened stress state, individuals repeatedly revisit the event in an attempt to restore agency. Yet dependence on external justice systems amplifies the sense of powerlessness.
Current research demonstrates that individuals with elevated injustice perceptions show altered social decision-making. For example, people with chronic pain are more likely to reject unfair offers and respond with punitive choices compared to the general population (Roose et al., 2024; Carriere et al., 2018). This underscores how injustice reshapes neurocognitive processes.
4. Personality Evolution After Injustice
Injustice can lead to two distinct developmental pathways:
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Defense and hardening: Emotional withdrawal, cynicism, distancing.
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Deepening: Heightened sensitivity to fairness, overidentification with others’ injustices.
Clinical experience shows that the memory of being wronged can continue to feed schemas of “not being enough,” “being unworthy,” or “not being seen” even years later (Bies, 2024). In this sense, injustice is not merely an event—it can become part of one’s identity structure.
5. Repair And Rebuilding Trust
Although individuals often fixate on external justice, clinical literature makes it clear that healing begins internally—with self-witnessing and self-validation:
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Practicing self-fairness: The statement “I did not deserve this” physiologically downregulates the threat response (Tabibnia & Lieberman, 2007).
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Reframing anger: Suppressed anger becomes traumatic; directed anger becomes a boundary-setting tool (Bies, 2024).
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Naming the experience: Using accurate terms (e.g., gaslighting, discrimination, manipulation) organizes the nervous system.
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Finding a witness: A therapist or trusted individual affirming “Yes, this was unfair” can be profoundly reparative (Carriere et al., 2018).
This process replaces the dependency on external justice with an inner contract: “My worth is not contingent upon the moral capacity of others.”
Injustice shatters the silent agreement many hold with the world—“If I am good, others will be good to me.” Yet this rupture can also mark the beginning of a new internal structure. True justice does not always unfold in institutions; it often begins in one’s own self-concept.
A therapist saying “what you experienced was unfair,” a friend who truly listens, or the moment a person tells themselves “I no longer carry this weight”—healing begins in these small but profoundly corrective experiences.
References
Bies, R. J. (2024). Moving from the pain and trauma of injustice to healing. Journal of Business and Psychology. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10869-023-09964-1
Carriere, J. S., Martel, M. O., Meints, S. M., Cornelius, M., & Edwards, R. R. (2018). The impact of perceived injustice on pain outcomes: A systematic review. Pain Medicine, 19(11), 2130–2146. https://doi.org/10.1093/pm/pnx344
Roose, E., Vissers, K., de Boer, M., van Ryckeghem, D., & Van Damme, S. (2024). Effect of perceived injustice–targeted pain neuroscience education on pain intensity and disability: Study protocol for a randomized controlled trial. BMJ Open, 14(1), e075779. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-075779
Tabibnia, G., & Lieberman, M. D. (2007). Fairness and cooperation are rewarding: Evidence from social cognitive neuroscience. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1118, 90–101. https://doi.org/10.1196/annals.1412.001
Tabibnia, G., & Lieberman, M. D. (2008). The sunny side of fairness: Preference for fairness activates reward circuitry (and disregarding unfairness activates self-control circuitry). Psychological Science, 19(4), 339–347. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9280.2008.02091.x


