Community Collectivism: A social dynamic approach to conceptualizing culture.

Culture shapes individuals, but the measurement of cultural differences has proven a challenge. Traditional measures of cultural values focus on individual perceptions. We suggest that values are established and maintained within social communities of proximate others, such as the family and its soc...

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Main Authors: Birol Akkuş, Tom Postmes, Katherine Stroebe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5619823?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-c7ce9d5678294a43be0aed5e98299be92020-11-25T01:49:03ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01129e018572510.1371/journal.pone.0185725Community Collectivism: A social dynamic approach to conceptualizing culture.Birol AkkuşTom PostmesKatherine StroebeCulture shapes individuals, but the measurement of cultural differences has proven a challenge. Traditional measures of cultural values focus on individual perceptions. We suggest that values are established and maintained within social communities of proximate others, such as the family and its social environment. Within such communities, values serve to maintain collective harmony whilst preserving individual agency. From a social-dynamic analysis of communities, we infer that community values of loyalty regulate individual commitment, values of honor regulate norm compliance, and values of group hierarchy maintain a division of labor. In addition, communities may regulate the ways in which individuals have independent agency. A new scale to measure these values was validated in four studies (N = 398, 112, 465 and 111) among Dutch (religious and non-religious), Turkish-Dutch, Surinamese and Turkish groups. Values and practices were measured at the level of the individual ('What do you value?') and at the level of the perceived community ('What does your community value?'). Results show that, unlike individual-level measures of individualism/collectivism, this scale has excellent reliability, differentiates between cultural groups, and has predictive validity for future (voting) behavior. This approach provides a new way of conceptualizing culture, a new measure of collectivism and new insights into the role of proximate others in shaping culture.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5619823?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Birol Akkuş
Tom Postmes
Katherine Stroebe
spellingShingle Birol Akkuş
Tom Postmes
Katherine Stroebe
Community Collectivism: A social dynamic approach to conceptualizing culture.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Birol Akkuş
Tom Postmes
Katherine Stroebe
author_sort Birol Akkuş
title Community Collectivism: A social dynamic approach to conceptualizing culture.
title_short Community Collectivism: A social dynamic approach to conceptualizing culture.
title_full Community Collectivism: A social dynamic approach to conceptualizing culture.
title_fullStr Community Collectivism: A social dynamic approach to conceptualizing culture.
title_full_unstemmed Community Collectivism: A social dynamic approach to conceptualizing culture.
title_sort community collectivism: a social dynamic approach to conceptualizing culture.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Culture shapes individuals, but the measurement of cultural differences has proven a challenge. Traditional measures of cultural values focus on individual perceptions. We suggest that values are established and maintained within social communities of proximate others, such as the family and its social environment. Within such communities, values serve to maintain collective harmony whilst preserving individual agency. From a social-dynamic analysis of communities, we infer that community values of loyalty regulate individual commitment, values of honor regulate norm compliance, and values of group hierarchy maintain a division of labor. In addition, communities may regulate the ways in which individuals have independent agency. A new scale to measure these values was validated in four studies (N = 398, 112, 465 and 111) among Dutch (religious and non-religious), Turkish-Dutch, Surinamese and Turkish groups. Values and practices were measured at the level of the individual ('What do you value?') and at the level of the perceived community ('What does your community value?'). Results show that, unlike individual-level measures of individualism/collectivism, this scale has excellent reliability, differentiates between cultural groups, and has predictive validity for future (voting) behavior. This approach provides a new way of conceptualizing culture, a new measure of collectivism and new insights into the role of proximate others in shaping culture.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5619823?pdf=render
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