Exploring the Unknown: Predicting the Responses of Publics not yet Surveyed

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Authors

This article argues that cultural change is roughly predictable: to a large extent, it is shaped by a few variables included in a model of cultural modernization that is presented here. The beliefs and values of a society’s people are also affected by unique world events and country-specific factors that would not fit into a general model, such as a given society’s political parties and leaders, so our predictions will not be precisely accurate. Nevertheless, in this article we will stick our necks out and predict the locations on two major cultural dimensions of all the countries likely to be included in the next wave of the World Values Survey, to be carried out in 2005/2006. Using a simple predictive model based on our revised version of modernization theory, we first ‘predict’ and test the positions that 80 societies should have on a two major dimensions of cross-cultural variation in the most recent wave of surveys (carried out in 1999/2001); we find that
our predictions are surprisingly accurate: the average prediction for a given country falls within a small radius of the location that is actually observed on the cross-cultural map (specifically: the average prediction and the actual location fall within a circle that occupies less than two percent of the map’s area). We then use this same model to predict the survey responses that we expect to find for 120 countries that are most likely to be surveyed in the next wave of surveys, in 2005/2006. Almost half of these countries have not been included in our previous surveys (and a number have never been covered in any survey of which we are aware). These are genuine blind predictions / which we believe is
an important challenge for social scientists. Our predictions will not be exactly correct; in some cases, they will not even be in the right ballpark. But we are confident that in the great majority of cases, they will come much closer to the observed results than would random guesses. We are confident that these a priori predictions will be reasonably close to the results obtained from actual fieldwork, because analysis of data from more than 60 societies surveyed in previous waves of the World Values Surveys and European Values Surveys indicates that cross-cultural differences in basic values have a surprisingly consistent relationship with economic development. The values and beliefs of mass publics vary a great deal cross-nationally, but they tend to vary in a roughly predictable way that can be derived from a revised version of modernization theory.
OriginalspracheEnglisch
ZeitschriftInternational Review of Sociology
Jahrgang15
Ausgabenummer1
Seiten (von - bis)173-201
Anzahl der Seiten29
ISSN0390-6701
DOIs
PublikationsstatusErschienen - 01.03.2005
Extern publiziertJa

DOI

Zuletzt angesehen

Publikationen

  1. A cascade regulator using Lyapunov's PID-PID controllers for an aggregate actuator in automotive applications
  2. BUSINESS MODELS IN BANKING: A CLUSTER ANALYSIS USING ARCHIVAL DATA
  3. Encoding the law of State responsibility with courage and resolve
  4. Do children with deficits in basic cognitive functions profit from mixed age primary schools?
  5. A Multilab Replication of the Ego Depletion Effect
  6. Perception of Space and Time in a Created Environment
  7. Decoding evidence-based entrepreneurship
  8. Mechanical properties and microstructures of nano SiC reinforced ZE10 composites prepared with ultrasonic vibration
  9. Other spaces
  10. German Utilities and distributed PV
  11. Introduction
  12. Telecoupling as a framework to support a more nuanced understanding of causality in land system science
  13. A robust model predictive control using a feedforward structure for a hybrid hydraulic piezo actuator in camless internal combustion engines
  14. Assessing authenticity in modelling test items: deriving a theoretical model
  15. Discourse of ‘Self’ and ‘Other’ in Newspaper Editorials on Insecurity in Nigeria
  16. Usage pattern-based exposure screening as a simple tool for the regional priority-setting in environmental risk assessment of veterinary antibiotics
  17. Multi-view hidden markov perceptrons
  18. DigiSchreib
  19. Diffusion of the Balanced Scorecard
  20. From Planning to Implementation: Top-Down and Bottom-Up Approaches for Collaborative Watershed Management
  21. Determinants of entrepreneurial intent: A meta-analytic test and integration of competing models
  22. High-precision frequency measurements: indispensable tools at the core of the molecular-level analysis of complex systems.
  23. Erwiderung einer Erwiderung
  24. Using Principal Component Analysis for information-rich socio-ecological vulnerability mapping in Southern Africa
  25. Using the Domestication Approach for the Analysis of Diffusion and Participation Processes of New Media