Rethinking individualism and collectivism: Evaluation of theoretical assumptions and meta-analyses.
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Abstract
Are Americans more individualistic and less collectivistic than members of other groups? The authors summarize plausible psychological implications of individualism-collectivism (IND-COL), meta-analyze cross-national and within-United States IND-COL differences, and review evidence for effects of IND-COL on self-concept, well-being, cognition, and relationality. European Americans were found to be both more individualistic-valuing personal independence more-and less collectivistic-feeling duty to in-groups less-than others. However, European Americans were not more individualistic than African Americans, or Latinos, and not less collectivistic than Japanese or Koreans. Among Asians, only Chinese showed large…
Citation impact
5,649
total citations
- FWCI
- 124.45
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 345
Citations per year
Authors
3Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Collectivism
- Individualism
- Psychology
- Feeling
- Social psychology
- Cognition
- Duty
- Individualistic culture
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Reduced inequalities
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