1 / 16

East Asian Values Surveys Making a case for East Asian-origin values survey concepts

East Asian Values Surveys Making a case for East Asian-origin values survey concepts. Henk Vinken Pyrrhula BV & OSA, Institute for Labour Studies Tilburg, Netherlands ECCS, European Centre for Comparative Surveys Mannheim, Germany www.henkvinken.nl hvinken@gmail.com

lauriej
Télécharger la présentation

East Asian Values Surveys Making a case for East Asian-origin values survey concepts

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. East Asian Values SurveysMaking a case for East Asian-origin values survey concepts Henk Vinken Pyrrhula BV & OSA, Institute for Labour Studies Tilburg, Netherlands ECCS, European Centre for Comparative SurveysMannheim, Germany www.henkvinken.nlhvinken@gmail.com Asian Lectures Tour March-April 2007

  2. Vinken, H. (2007). Religion and traditional values in East Asia. Exploring five comparative values surveys in East Asia. Working paper for School of Sociology, Kwansei Gakuin University, Nishinomiya, Hyogo, Japan. Vinken, H. (2006). East Asian Values Surveys. Making a case for East Asian-origin values survey concepts. Mannheim: ZUMA (ZUMA Arbeitsbericht 2006/05; ISSN 1610-4110). Four chapters in P. Ester, M. Braun & P. Mohler (Eds.) (2006), Globalization, value change, and generations. A cross-national and intergenerational perspective. Leiden & Boston: Brill (ISBN-13 978-90-04-15217-7; ISBN-10 90-04-15217-3) (Series: European Values Studies, Vol 10.; ISSN 1568-5926). Vinken, H. (2005). Western bias in the sociology of religion. Universalist discourses in sociology and particularist indicators in four key surveys. Working paper for School of Sociology, Kwansei Gakuin University, Nishinomiya, Hyogo, Japan (Download is a revised version submitted to an international social science journal October 2006). Vinken, H., J. Soeters & P. Ester (Eds.) (2004). Comparing cultures. Dimensions of culture in a comparative perspective. Leiden & Boston: Brill (ISBN 90-04-13115-9) (Series: International Studies in Sociology and Social Anthropology, Vol. 93; ISSN 0074-8684). East Asian Values SurveysMaking a case for East Asian-origin values survey concepts

  3. East Asian Values SurveysMaking a case for East Asian-origin values survey concepts Famous contemporary global values surveysWVS,World Values SurveySVS, Schwartz Values SurveyISSP, International Social Survey ProgrammeNES, National Election StudiesEtc. Fielded in many (East) Asian countries ! Values* Latent, unobservable constructs of what is regarded a desirable state of affairs over against another state of affairs* Guiding principles for action: influence “the selection of modes, means, and ends of action” * Stable and durable: do not disappear when situation changes (<-> attitudes, opinions, etc.)* Most ideal to compare cultures (over time) Most contemporary global values surveys concepts and methodologies are of Western-origin

  4. East Asian Values SurveysMaking a case for East Asian-origin values survey concepts Most contemporary global values surveys concepts and methodologies are of Western-originBias going in two waysGeert Hofstede, 2007: “Issues prominent in the researcher’s culture but not necessarily relevant to the respondents will be included, and issues crucial in the respondents’ culture but not in the researchers’ may be overlooked”. If global values surveys are Western, then do we measure and compare Western values or desired states of affairs only?

  5. East Asian Values SurveysMaking a case for East Asian-origin values survey concepts AimTake account of possible Western bias and enhance cultural fit of global values surveys covering non-Western nations First questionWhere can we expect East Asian values to differ? HowReview key literature on East Asian values conceptions and preliminarily analyze recent East Asian-origin comparative surveys AB, Asia Barometer (2003) AnB, Asian Barometer (2001-2003) EAVS, East Asia Value Survey (2002-2004)

  6. East Asian Values SurveysMaking a case for East Asian-origin values survey concepts Core issueLegitimacy to compare cultures and thus values at the national level Strong arguments pro* Globalization sparks quest for and strengthening of national identity* Countries increasingly similar economically, thus cultural differences rise in relative importance* Still substantially more cultural diversity found between than within countries * Many other non-cultural reasons to keep nation as a relevant entity of comparison (political, institutional, etc.) YetWe should not disregard cultures and values at work at other levels* E.g. within-China diversity (city-level examples available)And beware of over-stressing the role of national cultures

  7. Universalism versus ParticularismWhat is found in all cultures versus what is unique to one E.g. Absolute nature of human rights. Claim ideas are independent of who believes, are part of pre-given make-up, c.q. all are driven by psyche -> bias: global search for adherence to universalist ideas only Particularists belief values depend on contexts (not part of inner core), esp. membership groups (family, work, etc.) -> no search outside context; weak diffusion particularist ideas East Asian Values SurveysMaking a case for East Asian-origin values survey concepts Orientalism versusReversed-OrientalismOrient/Occident –East/West binary develops from ‘weak East’ (1980s) to ‘weak West’ (>1980s): E.g. (neo-) Confucian Ethics debates since 1980s Note danger of triggering ‘othering’ process: defining the other as ‘specific’ or ‘historically typical’ and seeing the self as ‘generic’ and ‘universal’

  8. Individualism versus Collectivism East Asian Values SurveysMaking a case for East Asian-origin values survey concepts Key divergence East-West Contemporary literaturePersonal independenceObligationDutyRelatedness to others Hofstede (2001) Culture’s Consequences(2nd ed.) Individualism and collectivism varies per life domain

  9. East Asian Values SurveysMaking a case for East Asian-origin values survey concepts WorkWhich values relevant in and originating from East Asia? Key wordsSacrifice, feeling of duty, fitting in, efforts to relate to co-workers and those who may benefit one’s group (e.g. co-alumni), trying hard/doing one’s utmost; returns are security, guidance, and protection by employer/co-workers EvidenceWestern-origin global values studies focus on personal benefits of work (material/extrinsic or immaterial/intrinsic such as salary, promotion, personal growth) or individualist notions of (affective) commitment to work (ISSP)

  10. East Asian Values SurveysMaking a case for East Asian-origin values survey concepts PoliticsWhich values relevant in and originating from East Asia? Key wordsConfucianism: working for the good of the family, assuring material well-being, and virtuous leadership (including perseverance and sacrifice); rule by talented AND benevolent elite with ‘carte blanche leadership’ (dependence public who expect services). Legalism: expecting and accepting strong state that addresses all needs. Assuring mutual (material) benefits versus personal trust. High network capital/strong support organisations tied to authorities. EvidenceWestern scholars celebrate universal nature of liberal democracy, individual rights and independent civil society. Global values studies focus on personal trust, voter turn-out, partisanship, the ‘good’ citizen and ‘civil society’ separated from state/business sector.

  11. East Asian Values SurveysMaking a case for East Asian-origin values survey concepts ReligionWhich values relevant in and originating from East Asia? Key wordsSyncreticism: melding various (opposing) schools of thought. Define one’s self a-school in situation x, b-school in situation y, etc. Not 1 value, belief, practice with pinnacle importance, but many compete. Dieties not supernatural only. Practice also without mediators (priests, etc.). Practical/this-worldly merging immaterial and material benefits. Embedded in family life AND in government bureaucracy. EvidenceWestern-origin surveys require 1 choice (sic!), focus on single membership, monotheism, Christian concepts, some extra ‘occult’ items to tap non-Western/New Age beliefs (see ‘othering’ process, slide 7).

  12. East Asian Values SurveysMaking a case for East Asian-origin values survey concepts Family lifeWhich values relevant in and originating from East Asia? Key wordsPrototypical for all relationships. Filial bonds override conjugal ones. Filial piety AND anxiety (not easy to bear, esp. not for women). Feeling attached to family less important than duty and respect. Sacrifice and unselfish complete devotion to children. High relational value of children (standing among kin). EvidenceWestern-origin surveys (e.g., ISSP) focus on role men/women working out/in the home, mistake taking care of family life with doing household chores and show weak relationships with (Western-origin) values in other domains (e.g., religion, see previous slide). Some surveys (VOC, Values of Children project) show change and stability in East Asian family values.

  13. Conclusions East Asian Values SurveysMaking a case for East Asian-origin values survey concepts Overlooking the four domainsMany inadequate values concepts in global values surveys that yet are fielded in East Asia. In summary: WorkExtrinsic/intrinsic work values, affective commitmentPoliticsPersonal trust, voluntary associational life, a separate civil society ReligionMonotheism (1 choice), dominance doctrine over practice, authority figures, passive indulgence, transcendence over this-worldliness, separating religion from family and state relationshipsFamily lifeFamily as spouse/children unit, superiority of emotional bonds, attachment as voluntary choice, family life as household chores

  14. Conclusions East Asian Values SurveysMaking a case for East Asian-origin values survey concepts Overlooking the four domainsIncluding adequate values concepts in global values surveys that make sense to East Asian publics (and scholars). In summary: WorkSacrifice, devotion, fitting in, preserving relationships, loyaltyPoliticsReciprocal relationships, sacrifice, self-discipline, for the (material) good of one’s in-group (criterion also for outsider-relationships) ReligionSyncreticism, polytheism, context-dependence, central role of offerings also for this-worldly goals, ties to family and state virtues Family lifeFilial piety and anxiety, sacrifice, awareness of obligations, securing emotional, relational and material returns

  15. Conclusions East Asian Values SurveysMaking a case for East Asian-origin values survey concepts Overlooking the four domainsSimilar keywords that cross the four domains Sacrifice (for one’s in-group)Preserving reciprocal relationshipsAssuring material benefitsOthers?

  16. With your help we can East Asian Values SurveysMaking a case for East Asian-origin values survey concepts Vigorously meld several school of thoughtWorking towards improving comparative values surveys. For the benefit of global academia (no comparability, no clue what is truly universal/particular, weak explanatory power of values), and for East Asian publics (unaddressed concerns, weak responsiveness of policies and politics). Stepwise: AnalysesAnalyzing comparative values surveys from East Asia searching the best measurement instrumentsSeminarsBringing together (young) East Asian scholars to suggest, test and debate the best measurement instruments (per domain) InclusionIncluding a frugal set of indicators in global values surveys

More Related