Are Dimensions of Gender Inequality Uniformly Associated With Human Values?

A previous work of Schwartz and Rubel-Lifschitz (2009, https://doi.org/10.1037/a0015546) highlighted the association between human values and gender equality. However, gender equality is not a monolith. Indeed, it is a multidimensional phenomenon. We started from this multidimensionality to understa...

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Main Authors: Serena Stefani, Gabriele Prati
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PsychOpen 2021-05-01
Series:Europe's Journal of Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ejop.psychopen.eu/index.php/ejop/article/view/2261
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spelling doaj-73d7f2c0beb440679436825f296ac4812021-07-13T15:14:55ZengPsychOpenEurope's Journal of Psychology1841-04132021-05-011729210210.5964/ejop.2261ejop.2261Are Dimensions of Gender Inequality Uniformly Associated With Human Values?Serena Stefani0Gabriele Prati1Department of Psychology and Cognitive Science, University of Trento, Rovereto (TN), ItalyDepartment of Psychology, University of Bologna, Cesena (FC), ItalyA previous work of Schwartz and Rubel-Lifschitz (2009, https://doi.org/10.1037/a0015546) highlighted the association between human values and gender equality. However, gender equality is not a monolith. Indeed, it is a multidimensional phenomenon. We started from this multidimensionality to understand how the relative importance of human values varies through the different dimensions of Gender Equality Index (GEI)—namely work, money, knowledge, time, power, and health. We have designed a cross-national study based on secondary data analysis from international databases (i.e., European Social Survey [ESS] and GEI). Through the Bayesian correlational analysis of 18 European countries, findings revealed that 1) universalism, benevolence and self-direction are strongly and positively correlated to gender equality; 2) security, power and achievement are strongly and negatively correlated to equality while 3) conformity, tradition, stimulation, and hedonism have weak/non-significant correlation coefficients with gender equality. Relevance to cultural values and ideologies that support social equality are discussed. Furthermore, we find that some values are related to certain specific gender equality dimensions. Our results provide a more fine-grained analysis compared to previous findings, by outlining a more complex scenario.https://ejop.psychopen.eu/index.php/ejop/article/view/2261genderequalityvaluesdimensionscross-sectionalwomen
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Serena Stefani
Gabriele Prati
spellingShingle Serena Stefani
Gabriele Prati
Are Dimensions of Gender Inequality Uniformly Associated With Human Values?
Europe's Journal of Psychology
gender
equality
values
dimensions
cross-sectional
women
author_facet Serena Stefani
Gabriele Prati
author_sort Serena Stefani
title Are Dimensions of Gender Inequality Uniformly Associated With Human Values?
title_short Are Dimensions of Gender Inequality Uniformly Associated With Human Values?
title_full Are Dimensions of Gender Inequality Uniformly Associated With Human Values?
title_fullStr Are Dimensions of Gender Inequality Uniformly Associated With Human Values?
title_full_unstemmed Are Dimensions of Gender Inequality Uniformly Associated With Human Values?
title_sort are dimensions of gender inequality uniformly associated with human values?
publisher PsychOpen
series Europe's Journal of Psychology
issn 1841-0413
publishDate 2021-05-01
description A previous work of Schwartz and Rubel-Lifschitz (2009, https://doi.org/10.1037/a0015546) highlighted the association between human values and gender equality. However, gender equality is not a monolith. Indeed, it is a multidimensional phenomenon. We started from this multidimensionality to understand how the relative importance of human values varies through the different dimensions of Gender Equality Index (GEI)—namely work, money, knowledge, time, power, and health. We have designed a cross-national study based on secondary data analysis from international databases (i.e., European Social Survey [ESS] and GEI). Through the Bayesian correlational analysis of 18 European countries, findings revealed that 1) universalism, benevolence and self-direction are strongly and positively correlated to gender equality; 2) security, power and achievement are strongly and negatively correlated to equality while 3) conformity, tradition, stimulation, and hedonism have weak/non-significant correlation coefficients with gender equality. Relevance to cultural values and ideologies that support social equality are discussed. Furthermore, we find that some values are related to certain specific gender equality dimensions. Our results provide a more fine-grained analysis compared to previous findings, by outlining a more complex scenario.
topic gender
equality
values
dimensions
cross-sectional
women
url https://ejop.psychopen.eu/index.php/ejop/article/view/2261
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