Congruence and Performance of Value Concepts in Social Research

Two value concepts are dominant in the social sciences: (1) Schwartz's theory of basic human values, measured through the Portrait Values Questionnaire (ESS) and (2) Inglehart's postmaterialism and Welzel's extension to the self-expression values scale (WVS/EVS). To advance research i...

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Main Authors: Tilo Beckers, Pascal Siegers, Anabel Kuntz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Survey Research Association 2012-04-01
Series:Survey Research Methods
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.ub.uni-konstanz.de/srm/article/view/5093
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spelling doaj-4c671fb4f2774cdc8470efcd932a55132020-11-24T22:56:06ZengEuropean Survey Research AssociationSurvey Research Methods1864-33611864-33612012-04-0161132410.18148/srm/2012.v6i1.50934847Congruence and Performance of Value Concepts in Social ResearchTilo BeckersPascal SiegersAnabel KuntzTwo value concepts are dominant in the social sciences: (1) Schwartz's theory of basic human values, measured through the Portrait Values Questionnaire (ESS) and (2) Inglehart's postmaterialism and Welzel's extension to the self-expression values scale (WVS/EVS). To advance research in values, two questions need to be addressed: (1) Are the concepts and measurements of values in the different approaches interchangeable? (2) Which of the concepts performs better for explaining moral and social attitudes? This study contributes to the discussion on value concepts by comparing these value instruments using individual level data from an online access panel (n = 762) and assessing the performance of values instruments for microexplanations of moral (end-of-life attitudes and sexual morality) and social attitudes (xenophobia). Overall, the measurement model of basic human values with the PVQ provides a sound basis for comparing the Schwartz values to postmaterialism and self-expression values. In both cases, there are positive correlations with universalism and self-direction and negative correlations with tradition/conformity and security, which do not exceed 0.4. Regarding the performance, it turns out that the Schwartz values are in toto a more powerful tool than both Inglehart's postmaterialism and Welzel's self-expression values, in terms of explained variance as well as in terms of standardized effects.https://ojs.ub.uni-konstanz.de/srm/article/view/5093value conceptspostmaterialismPortrait Values Questionnaireself-expression valuescomparative analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tilo Beckers
Pascal Siegers
Anabel Kuntz
spellingShingle Tilo Beckers
Pascal Siegers
Anabel Kuntz
Congruence and Performance of Value Concepts in Social Research
Survey Research Methods
value concepts
postmaterialism
Portrait Values Questionnaire
self-expression values
comparative analysis
author_facet Tilo Beckers
Pascal Siegers
Anabel Kuntz
author_sort Tilo Beckers
title Congruence and Performance of Value Concepts in Social Research
title_short Congruence and Performance of Value Concepts in Social Research
title_full Congruence and Performance of Value Concepts in Social Research
title_fullStr Congruence and Performance of Value Concepts in Social Research
title_full_unstemmed Congruence and Performance of Value Concepts in Social Research
title_sort congruence and performance of value concepts in social research
publisher European Survey Research Association
series Survey Research Methods
issn 1864-3361
1864-3361
publishDate 2012-04-01
description Two value concepts are dominant in the social sciences: (1) Schwartz's theory of basic human values, measured through the Portrait Values Questionnaire (ESS) and (2) Inglehart's postmaterialism and Welzel's extension to the self-expression values scale (WVS/EVS). To advance research in values, two questions need to be addressed: (1) Are the concepts and measurements of values in the different approaches interchangeable? (2) Which of the concepts performs better for explaining moral and social attitudes? This study contributes to the discussion on value concepts by comparing these value instruments using individual level data from an online access panel (n = 762) and assessing the performance of values instruments for microexplanations of moral (end-of-life attitudes and sexual morality) and social attitudes (xenophobia). Overall, the measurement model of basic human values with the PVQ provides a sound basis for comparing the Schwartz values to postmaterialism and self-expression values. In both cases, there are positive correlations with universalism and self-direction and negative correlations with tradition/conformity and security, which do not exceed 0.4. Regarding the performance, it turns out that the Schwartz values are in toto a more powerful tool than both Inglehart's postmaterialism and Welzel's self-expression values, in terms of explained variance as well as in terms of standardized effects.
topic value concepts
postmaterialism
Portrait Values Questionnaire
self-expression values
comparative analysis
url https://ojs.ub.uni-konstanz.de/srm/article/view/5093
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