{"title":"A Study of Children’s Culture across 35 Societies","authors":"Wolfgang Messner","doi":"10.1080/08961530.2023.2268274","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"AbstractChildren are inherently different from adults. Yet, our understanding of their sociocultural contexts across countries is limited. This study uses survey data from 95,576 children from 35 societies and proposes a three-faceted cultural framework that covers the cultural dimensions of collectivism, power equivalence, and aggressiveness with respect to gender and contextual interactions. The study challenges the idea of a general transfer of parents’ values to children during the socialization process. The proposed framework has social and business relevance for diverse areas such as improving school experiences, speech-language intervention programs, and marketing to children.Keywords: Adolescentschildhoodchildrenculturepreadolescencesocializationvalues Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.Data availability statementThe data used in this publication comes from the third wave of Children’s Worlds project: An international survey of children’s lives and well-being (www.isciweb.org). The views expressed here are those of the author, they are not necessarily those of ISCWeB.Notes1 In the context of training young children, Findlay (Citation1906, p. 72) introduced the terms in- and outworld with respect to what children remember versus what they see. I suggest to use the term insphere for interactions with immediate family at home in analogy to inorganic chemistry. An inner sphere (or bonded) electron transfer is a chemical reaction that occurs between complexes via a bridging ligand. At least one of the complexes needs to allow the bridge to form. An outer sphere electron transfer occurs between complexes that remain separate and intact before, during, and after the transfer event (Douthwaite Citation2011). In geometry, the insphere (or inscribed sphere) of a solid is a sphere that is tangent to all faces of the solid, whereas the circumsphere (or circumscribed sphere) touches all the outer vertices of a solid.","PeriodicalId":47051,"journal":{"name":"Journal of International Consumer Marketing","volume":"50 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":1.8000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-16","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of International Consumer Marketing","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/08961530.2023.2268274","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"BUSINESS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
AbstractChildren are inherently different from adults. Yet, our understanding of their sociocultural contexts across countries is limited. This study uses survey data from 95,576 children from 35 societies and proposes a three-faceted cultural framework that covers the cultural dimensions of collectivism, power equivalence, and aggressiveness with respect to gender and contextual interactions. The study challenges the idea of a general transfer of parents’ values to children during the socialization process. The proposed framework has social and business relevance for diverse areas such as improving school experiences, speech-language intervention programs, and marketing to children.Keywords: Adolescentschildhoodchildrenculturepreadolescencesocializationvalues Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.Data availability statementThe data used in this publication comes from the third wave of Children’s Worlds project: An international survey of children’s lives and well-being (www.isciweb.org). The views expressed here are those of the author, they are not necessarily those of ISCWeB.Notes1 In the context of training young children, Findlay (Citation1906, p. 72) introduced the terms in- and outworld with respect to what children remember versus what they see. I suggest to use the term insphere for interactions with immediate family at home in analogy to inorganic chemistry. An inner sphere (or bonded) electron transfer is a chemical reaction that occurs between complexes via a bridging ligand. At least one of the complexes needs to allow the bridge to form. An outer sphere electron transfer occurs between complexes that remain separate and intact before, during, and after the transfer event (Douthwaite Citation2011). In geometry, the insphere (or inscribed sphere) of a solid is a sphere that is tangent to all faces of the solid, whereas the circumsphere (or circumscribed sphere) touches all the outer vertices of a solid.
儿童在本质上不同于成人。然而,我们对各国社会文化背景的了解是有限的。本研究使用了来自35个社会的95,576名儿童的调查数据,并提出了一个三面文化框架,涵盖了集体主义、权力对等和侵略性的文化维度,涉及性别和情境互动。这项研究挑战了在社会化过程中父母的价值观普遍转移给孩子的观点。所提出的框架在改善学校体验、语言干预计划和儿童营销等多个领域具有社会和商业意义。关键词:青少年;儿童;文化;青春期前;数据可用性声明本出版物中使用的数据来自第三波儿童世界项目:儿童生活和福祉的国际调查(www.isciweb.org)。本文仅代表作者个人观点,并不代表ISCWeB的观点。注1在训练幼儿的背景下,Findlay (Citation1906, p. 72)介绍了关于儿童记忆和他们所看到的事物的内外世界这两个术语。我建议用“灵感圈”这个词来形容与家庭成员的互动,就像无机化学一样。内球(或键合)电子转移是通过桥接配体在配合物之间发生的化学反应。至少其中一个复合体需要允许桥梁形成。外层电子转移发生在复合物之间,这些复合物在转移事件发生之前、期间和之后都保持分离和完整(Douthwaite Citation2011)。在几何学中,一个实体的内球面(或内切球)是一个与实体的所有面相切的球体,而圆周球面(或外缘球面)则与实体的所有外部顶点相切。
期刊介绍:
The Journal of International Consumer Marketing examines consumer and organizational buyer behavior on a cross-cultural/national and global scale combining up-to-date research with practical applications to help you develop an action plan for successful marketing strategy development. Business professionals, policymakers, and academics share insights and "inside" information on a wide range of cross-cultural marketing issues, including international business customs, negotiating styles, consumer brand loyalty, price sensitivity, purchasing and leasing, consumer satisfaction (and dissatisfaction), and advertising.