Shifts in emancipative values during times of crises: Longitudinal evidence from the COVID-19 pandemic in Russia

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Standard

Shifts in emancipative values during times of crises: Longitudinal evidence from the COVID-19 pandemic in Russia. / Korsunava, Viyaleta; Sokolov, Boris; Welzel, Christian.
In: Asian Journal of Social Psychology, Vol. 29, No. 1, e70078, 03.2026.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{c77d3863709f4b91a70a17a5111e1e84,
title = "Shifts in emancipative values during times of crises: Longitudinal evidence from the COVID-19 pandemic in Russia",
abstract = "Alongside collectivism–individualism, autonomy–embeddedness, and monumentalism–flexibility, emancipative values (EV) constitute one of the most powerful cultural markers of societal differences in economic development, demographic change, and levels of liberal democracy. However, the evolutionary emancipation theory's validity relies on the assumption that values crystallize in early adolescence and persist across the lifespan—a premise lacking robust empirical scrutiny. Given EV's significance, this study examines their dynamics in Russia during the COVID-19 pandemic, using three waves (June 2020–December 2021) of the international longitudinal survey {\textquoteleft}Values in Crisis{\textquoteright}. Aggregate-level analysis supports the {\textquoteleft}baseline stability theorem{\textquoteright}, revealing no substantial decline in EV. However, divergent trends emerge for EV components: choice values undergo a marginal increase, while equality values show a slight decline. At the individual level, pandemic-related experiences, that is, COVID-19 infection, job loss, or health anxiety, exhibit no significant effect on choice values; however, equality values demonstrate a weak positive association with the increase in economic concerns. Latent growth mixture modelling further indicates that considerable EV shifts occurred in only ~2% of the panel sample. These findings provide novel evidence that core values remain stable even amid unprecedented exogenous shocks, reinforcing the {\textquoteleft}baseline stability theorem{\textquoteright} despite severe threats to health and economic security.",
keywords = "COVID-19 pandemic, emancipative values, latent class linear mixed modelling, modernization theory, value change, values in crisis, Politics",
author = "Viyaleta Korsunava and Boris Sokolov and Christian Welzel",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2026 Asian Association of Social Psychology and John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.",
year = "2026",
month = mar,
doi = "10.1111/ajsp.70078",
language = "English",
volume = "29",
journal = "Asian Journal of Social Psychology",
issn = "1367-2223",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Shifts in emancipative values during times of crises

T2 - Longitudinal evidence from the COVID-19 pandemic in Russia

AU - Korsunava, Viyaleta

AU - Sokolov, Boris

AU - Welzel, Christian

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2026 Asian Association of Social Psychology and John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.

PY - 2026/3

Y1 - 2026/3

N2 - Alongside collectivism–individualism, autonomy–embeddedness, and monumentalism–flexibility, emancipative values (EV) constitute one of the most powerful cultural markers of societal differences in economic development, demographic change, and levels of liberal democracy. However, the evolutionary emancipation theory's validity relies on the assumption that values crystallize in early adolescence and persist across the lifespan—a premise lacking robust empirical scrutiny. Given EV's significance, this study examines their dynamics in Russia during the COVID-19 pandemic, using three waves (June 2020–December 2021) of the international longitudinal survey ‘Values in Crisis’. Aggregate-level analysis supports the ‘baseline stability theorem’, revealing no substantial decline in EV. However, divergent trends emerge for EV components: choice values undergo a marginal increase, while equality values show a slight decline. At the individual level, pandemic-related experiences, that is, COVID-19 infection, job loss, or health anxiety, exhibit no significant effect on choice values; however, equality values demonstrate a weak positive association with the increase in economic concerns. Latent growth mixture modelling further indicates that considerable EV shifts occurred in only ~2% of the panel sample. These findings provide novel evidence that core values remain stable even amid unprecedented exogenous shocks, reinforcing the ‘baseline stability theorem’ despite severe threats to health and economic security.

AB - Alongside collectivism–individualism, autonomy–embeddedness, and monumentalism–flexibility, emancipative values (EV) constitute one of the most powerful cultural markers of societal differences in economic development, demographic change, and levels of liberal democracy. However, the evolutionary emancipation theory's validity relies on the assumption that values crystallize in early adolescence and persist across the lifespan—a premise lacking robust empirical scrutiny. Given EV's significance, this study examines their dynamics in Russia during the COVID-19 pandemic, using three waves (June 2020–December 2021) of the international longitudinal survey ‘Values in Crisis’. Aggregate-level analysis supports the ‘baseline stability theorem’, revealing no substantial decline in EV. However, divergent trends emerge for EV components: choice values undergo a marginal increase, while equality values show a slight decline. At the individual level, pandemic-related experiences, that is, COVID-19 infection, job loss, or health anxiety, exhibit no significant effect on choice values; however, equality values demonstrate a weak positive association with the increase in economic concerns. Latent growth mixture modelling further indicates that considerable EV shifts occurred in only ~2% of the panel sample. These findings provide novel evidence that core values remain stable even amid unprecedented exogenous shocks, reinforcing the ‘baseline stability theorem’ despite severe threats to health and economic security.

KW - COVID-19 pandemic

KW - emancipative values

KW - latent class linear mixed modelling

KW - modernization theory

KW - value change

KW - values in crisis

KW - Politics

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105026584642&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1111/ajsp.70078

DO - 10.1111/ajsp.70078

M3 - Journal articles

AN - SCOPUS:105026584642

VL - 29

JO - Asian Journal of Social Psychology

JF - Asian Journal of Social Psychology

SN - 1367-2223

IS - 1

M1 - e70078

ER -

DOI