| Title: | Everyday norms have become more permissive over time and vary across cultures |
| Authors: | Eriksson, Kimmo Strimling, Pontus Vartanova, Irina Simpson, Brent Persson, Minna Abdi, Khalid Ahmed Ad, Neta Aldashev, Alisher Mohammad Ali, Habib Alì, Maurizio Aliyev, Khatai Alrefaee, Yasser M. H. A. Alvarado Ortiz, Alberth Estuardo Andersson, Per A. Andrighetto, Giulia Arikan, Gizem Benzon R. Aruta, John Jamir Lutete Ayikwa, Christian Baños-Chaparro, Jonatan Barrera, Davide Barsyte, Justina Batkeyev, Birzhan Batool, Azma Berezina, Elizaveta Ngandu Bimina, Stéphanie Björnstjerna, Marie Blumen, Sheyla Boski, Paweł Boštjančič, Eva Boum II, Yap Briguglio, Marie Bruno, Kagonbe Thu Bui, Huyen Thi Caycho-Rodríguez, Tomás Chen, Yanyan Kudzai Chiweshe, Manase Choi, Hoon-Seok Contreras-Ibáñez, Carlos C. Čorkalo, Dinka Cruz-Torres, Christian E. Czakó, Andrea de Zoysa, Piyanjali Demetrovics, Zsolt Dinić, Bojana M. Drače, Saša El-Haddad, Rita W. Engelmann, Jan B. Pérez, Ignacio Escudero Euh, Hyun Fang, Xia Frank, Celine Freidin, Esteban Fulop, Marta Gamsakhurdia, Vladimer García Jiménez, Mauro Alberto Gardarsdottir, Ragna B. Gavreliuc, Alin Hugues D. Gill, Colin Mathew Gjoneska, Biljana Glöckner, Andreas Graf, Sylvie Grigoryan, Ani Growiec, Katarzyna Haas, Brian W. Haddock, Geoffrey Hadjisolomou, Stavros P. Hadžiahmetović, Nina Haji Mohammad Ali, Mohammad Hosein Hakoköngäs, Eemeli Halama, Peter Hapunda, Given Hartanto, Andree Hazrati, Mahsa Herbas-Torrico, Boris Christian Holka, Szilárd Hřebíčková, Martina Hunter, John A. Ibikounle, Moudachirou Ilisko, Dzintra Hjördísar Jónsdóttir, Harpa Lind Kaminskiene, Zivile Kapoor, Hansika Kapović, Iva Karim, Gassemi Kawakami, Kerry Khachatryan, Narine Kirschner, Julian B. Kiruja, Jonah Kiyonari, Toko Kohút, Michal Kousar, Shazia Krasniqi, Besnik Lado, Ludovic Landa-Blanco, Miguel Landon, Barbara Lep, Žan Leslie, Lisa M. Li, Yang Liik, Kadi Lin, Ming-Jen Lobos Rivera, Marlon Elías López-López, Wilson Maloku, Edona Mandal, Mohona Manhique, Bernardo Ananias Mbende, Nathan Mpeti Medhioub, Imed Mendes Teixeira, Maria Luisa Tamayo, J. Paola Merchán Mohammed, Linda Lila Moore, Schontal N. Moraligil, Bahar Muradzada, Nijat Nanda, Herwin Nastina, Ekaterina Nejat, Pegah Nettle, Daniel Andre Nipassa, Orlando Julio Noe-Grijalva, Martin Ntampaka, Pie Ntone, Rodrigue Nussinson, Ravit Oljača, Milan Onyedire, Nneoma G. Onyishi, Ike E. Panagiotopoulou, Penny Alvarez, Daybel Pañellas Parvez, Md. Shahin Pasin, Gian Luca Pedović, Ivana de León, Pablo Pérez Perez Floriano, Lorena R. Pop-Jordanova, Nada Portillo, Jose Roberto Potang, Angela Quesada-Román, Adolfo Raver, Jana L. Rodrigues, Ricardo B. Rodríguez-Romero, Juan Diego Romanò, Sara Ross, Robert M. Rosun, Nachita Sadiković, Selka San Martin, Alvaro Smederevac, Snežana Smith, Sarah Jane Soboleva, Natalia Sonessa, Daniel Erena Stanley, Samantha K. Stoyanova, Kristina Stoyanov, Drozdstoy Takemura, Kosuke Thøgersen, John Tiliouine, Habib Tung, Hans Ulambayar, Tungalag Uzdavinyte, Elze Marija Waechter, Randall Wang, Yi-Ting Wu, Junhui Yambio, Brice Martial Yankson, Eric Yeh, Kuang-Hui van Lange, Paul A. M. |
| Keywords: | Social norms Culture -- Psychological aspects Cross-cultural studies Social change Attitude (Psychology) Manners and customs |
| Issue Date: | 2025 |
| Publisher: | Springer Nature |
| Citation: | Eriksson, K., Strimling, P., Vartanova, I., Simpson, B., Persson, M., Abdi, K. A.,...van Lange, P. A. M. (2025). Everyday norms have become more permissive over time and vary across cultures. Communications Psychology, 3(1), 1-14. |
| Abstract: | Every social situation that people encounter in their daily lives comes with a set of unwritten rules about what behavior is considered appropriate or inappropriate. These everyday norms can vary across societies: some societies may have more permissive norms in general or for certain behaviors, or for certain behaviors in specific situations. In a preregistered survey of 25,422 participants across 90 societies, we map societal differences in 150 everyday norms and show that they can be explained by how societies prioritize individualizing moral foundations such as care and liberty versus binding moral foundations such as purity. Specifically, societies with more individualistic morality tend to have more permissive norms in general (greater liberty) and especially for behaviors deemed vulgar (less purity), but they exhibit less permissive norms for behaviors perceived to have negative consequences in specific situations (greater care). By comparing our data with available data collected twenty years ago, we find a global pattern of change toward more permissive norms overall but less permissive norms for the most vulgar and inconsiderate behaviors. This study explains how social norms vary across behaviors, situations, societies, and time. |
| URI: | https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/139922 |
| Appears in Collections: | Scholarly Works - FacEMAEco
|
Items in OAR@UM are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.