Title of article :
CLIMATOECONOMIC ROOTS OF SURVIVAL VERSUS
SELF-EXPRESSION CULTURES
Author/Authors :
Evert van de Vliert، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
The circumstances under which societies adapt their cultural values to cold, temperate, and hot climates
include the availability of money to cope with climate. In a country-level study, collective income, household
income, and economic growth were conceptualized as moderators of the climate-culture link because
money is primarily used to satisfy homeostatic needs for thermal comfort, nutrition, and health. The results
demonstrate that members of societies in more-demanding climates endorse survival values at the expense
of self-expression values to the extent that they are poorer (n = 74 nations), that household incomes in these
lower-income societies are lower (n = 66 nations), and that they face more economic recession (n = 38
nations). In addition to theoretical implications, the findings have practical implications for the cultural consequences
of global warming and the effectiveness of financing for human development.
Keywords :
cultural adaptation , self-expression values , survival values , thermal climate
Journal title :
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
Journal title :
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology