Abstract
The Asian values debate has been long on
speculative advocacy but short on empirical
validation, with statistical tests emerging only
lately. This study explores two questions: whether
Asians indeed hold distinct cultural attitudes
when compared with non-Asians and whether these
cultural attitudes and beliefs identified as Asian
values form coherent dimensions among Asians. The
study first identifies four dimensions of Asian
values based on a review of various Asian values
discourses: familism, communalism, authority
orientations, and work ethic. The findings from
the empirical analysis based on multilevel models
and factor analysis return mixed support for the
Asian values hypothesis. Although East Asian
respondents do exhibit strong work-related values
compared with those from other regions, commitment
to familial values and authoritarian orientations
are actually lower among East Asians. Also, while
preference for strong leadership and parental duty
do turn out to form distinct sets of attitudes
among South and Southeast Asians, the four
dimensions do not constitute a clear value complex
in the minds of East Asians.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Economics and Econometrics,Sociology and Political Science,Development
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2. The two barometers did not
ask questions specifically about work attitudes,
yet the Asia Barometer has a set of questions
asking about the importance of education and
scholarship, which is included as the fourth
dimension in Table 1.
3. A Communitarian Critique of Authoritarianism
4. The Globalization of Capital in East and Southeast Asia: Measuring the Impact on Human Rights Standards
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