Cultural Convergence? Globalization and the birth of world public opinion

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Accademia di studi storici Aldo Moro CONVEGNO INTERNAZIONALE Roma, 17 20 novembre 2008 Cultural Convergence? Globalization and the birth of world public opinion Pippa Norris Harvard University and the University of Michigan

1 I. Theoretical debate and previous studies What is the impact of globalization on public opinion? Firewall model of cosmopolitan communications II. Research design and evidence III. Multilevel analysis IV. Conclusions and policy implications News media use is positively related to more liberal moral and social values Pattern clearest in cosmopolitan societies Implications for cultural protectionist policies? 2

Cultural Convergence? Cosmopolitan communications and national diversity Pippa Norris and Ronald Inglehart Contents Introduction 1. Is cultural diversity under threat? 2. Investigating cultural convergence Part I: Firewalls 3. Markets 4. Poverty 5. Freedom Part II: The consequences of globalized mass communications 6. Citizens: Nation and cosmopolitan identities 7. Consumers: Economic values 8. Morality: Traditional values, gender equality, religiosity and sexuality 9. Activists: Support for democracy, self-expression values, and human rights Conclusions 10. Cultural convergence over time? 11. Conclusions: The implications for cultural policies 3 4

The modern era of globalization: The expansion of networks of interdependence spanning national boundaries that follows the increasingly swift movement of ideas, money, goods, services, ecology, and people across borders. Rise of cosmopolitan communications The way we learn about, and interact with, people and places beyond the borders of our nation-state. Direct transfers of peoples, interpersonal communications, and mass communications (published, audio-visual, and technological) Growing volume and pace of interconnections among societies A threat for cultural diversity? Or the positive birth of world public opinion (Moro)? 1970s: Cultural imperialism? (Schiller) electronic colonialism (McPhail) 1990s: Coca-colonization? (Howes) McDonaldization? (Barber) 2000s: Cultural Protectionism? (EU/UNESCO) 5 Source: KOF Index of Globalization, 2008 6

Figure 1.1: Theories about the globalization of cultural markets Production Distribution Contents Audience impact Structural and economic changes in mass communications Convergence of national cultures -Broadcasting deregulation -Expansion commercial channels -Technological innovations -Free trade -Growth of multinational multimedia conglomerates Growth of cultural world trade Imbalance of Western/American imports Polarization of national cultures Fusion of national cultures Firewall model of limited effects 7 Cultural exports from the global North to South Impact on national cultural diversity Trade integration: External barriers to cultural markets Media Freedom: Internal barriers to information Poverty: Lack of public access to ICTs Learning: Processes for acquiring values and attitudes 8

1. Use of news media will vary by social sector H2.0: Use of the news media will be greatest among those with the greatest access to mass communications. H2.1: the more educated. H2.2: high-income groups. H2.3: the middle-aged/older generations (?). H2.4: those who are fluent in English. 2. Direct impact of mass media on world public opinion Media exposure fosters H1.1: more cosmopolitan orientations and greater tolerance to foreign lifestyles. H1.2: favorable attitudes toward consumer capitalism. H1.3: more liberal attitudes towards gender equality, sexuality, and religion. H1.4: democratic engagement 3. Effect of media use will be stronger in cosmopolitan societies Cross-level interaction effect strongest for media users living in H4.1: Most globalized societies, with few trade barriers H4.2: Societies with internal media freedom H4.3: Affluent societies with widespread access to mass media 4. Direct impact on culture will vary by type of media H3.0: Exposure to internet will have a stronger effect (as the most cosmopolitan media) than use of newspapers or TV/radio H3.1: Exposure to news TV will have a stronger effect than entertainment TV 5. Cultural convergence over time will be greatest among the most cosmopolitan societies. 11/15/2008 1. H5.3: Over time, growth in cosmopolitanism www.pippanorris.com will reduce divergence among national cultures. 9 10

Individual level Demographic characteristics Age/gender Socioeconomic resources Income, education Media use scale Newspapers, radio/tv news, Internet/email, books, magazines TV use in general National level Cosmopolitanism index Globalization index Media freedom index Economic development Cross-level interactions Cosmopolitanism index * media use scale 11 In the WVS 12

Media Use Scale: newspaper, radio/tv, magazine, books, internet People use different sources to learn what is going on in their country and the world. For each of the following sources, please indicate whether you used it last week (1) or did not use it last week (0) to obtain information. (read out and code one answer for each): Used it last week Did not use it last week V223. Daily newspaper 1 0 V224. News broadcasts on radio or TV 1 0 V225. Printed magazines 1 0 V226. In depth reports on radio or TV 1 0 V227. Books 1 0 V228. Internet, Email 1 0 V229. Talk with friends or colleagues 1 0 Limitations Direction of causality? Uses and gratifications theory Impact of other types of media (TV entertainment, movies, music etc) Limited gauge of extent of media frequency and attention No direct evidence of media contents 13 Cosmopolitanism Index Globalization Index (KOF).919 Economic development (GDP in PPP, Constant $ international) (World Bank).922 Media Freedom (Freedom House).799 Note: All scales were first standardized around the mean. The principle component factor analysis with varimax rotation generated a single dimension that accounted, in total, for 77% of the variance in the composite index. For the definition and measurement of each item, see Appendix A. 14

Cosmopolitanism Index, 2005 Italy Note: The Cosmopolitanism index is conceptualized as the permeability of societies to information flows and it is constructed according to levels of globalization, media freedom, and economic development, with all indices standardized. See text for details. 11/15/2008 11/15/2008 www.pippanorris.com www.pippanorris.com 15 16

Cultural Convergence? Cosmopolitan communications and national diversity Pippa Norris and Ronald Inglehart Contents Introduction 1. Is cultural diversity under threat? 2. Investigating cultural convergence Part I: Firewalls 3. Markets 4. Poverty 5. Freedom Part II: The consequences of globalized mass communications 6. Citizens: Nation and cosmopolitan identities 7. Consumers: Economic values 8. Morality: Traditional values, gender equality, religiosity and sexuality 9. Activists: Support for democracy, self-expression values, and human rights Conclusions 10. Cultural convergence over time? 11. Conclusions: The implications for cultural policies 17 Liberal sexual and moral values Tolerate low ethical standards in public life Religious values and practices Egalitarian gender equality values Liberal family values Justifiable: abortion.806 Justifiable: divorce.782 Justifiable: homosexuality.767 Justifiable: prostitution.735 Justifiable: euthanasia.704 Justifiable: suicide.625 Justifiable: cheating on taxes.818 Justifiable: avoiding a fare on public transport.803 Justifiable: claiming government benefits.783 Justifiable: someone accepting a bribe.769 Importance of God.819 Religious identity.782 Takes moments of prayer, meditation.770 Religion important in life.752 Often attend religious services.682 Men make better business executives than women do (disagree).865 Men make better political leaders than women (disagree).828 University more important for a boy than a girl (disagree).779 Woman as a single parent (approve).741 Family important in life (disagree).588 Marriage is an out-dated institution (agree).488 Proportion of variance 17.8 13.2 14.9 10.7 5.8 Notes: Factor analysis extraction Method: Principal Component Analysis. Rotation Method: Varimax with Kaiser Normalization. Coefficients of.40 or less were dropped 11/15/2008 from the analysis. See Appendix A for the specific items and www.pippanorris.com the construction of the scales. Source: World Values Survey 2005-7 18

Note: The mean position of categories of media users on the 100-point value scales by type of society, no controls. See Table 8.1 for the items used 11/15/2008 in the construction of the scales. www.pippanorris.com 19 Source: World Values Survey 2005-7 Note: The mean position of categories of media users on the 100-point value scales by type of society, no controls. See Table 8.1 for the items used in the construction of the scales. Source: World Values Survey 2005-7 20

21 Table 8.4: Multilevel regression models explaining social values Liberal sexual and moral values Tolerate low ethical standards in public life Religious values and practices Egalitarian gender equality values Liberal family values INDIVIDUAL LEVEL Demographic characteristics Age (years) -2.17*** -2.34*** 3.46*** -.951*** -1.52*** (.099) (.083) (.113) (.081) (.075) Gender (male=1).064.725*** -3.05*** -3.60*** -.679*** (.090) (.075) (.103) (.074) (.068) Socioeconomic resources Household income 10-pt scale 1.25***.481*** -.507***.351***.721*** (.107) (.090) (.124) (.088) (.082) Education 9-pt scale 1.66*** -.850*** -.495*** 2.283***.291*** (.115) (.097) (.134) (.094) (.088) Media use News media use scale.936*** -.443*** -.277*.867***.780*** (.112) (.094) (.131) (.092) (.086) NATIONAL-LEVEL Cosmopolitanism index 8.84*** -1.40-9.39** 4.64*** 1.70 (Globalization+Development+Freedom) (1.47) (1.77) (2.42) (1.14) (1.18) CROSS-LEVEL INTERACTIONS Cosmopolitanism*media use scale.569*** -.055 -.158.190*.021 (.109) (.092) (.123) (.090) (.085) Constant (intercept) 38.5 25.4 72.8 71.0 69.4 Schwartz BIC 380,457 379,100 319,932 387,905 328,937 N. respondents 43,088 44,565 35,826 45,755 40,198 N. nations 37 37 30 38 33 Note: All independent variables were standardized using mean centering (z-scores). Models present the results of the REML multilevel regression models (for details, see Appendix C) including the beta coefficient, (the standard error below in parenthesis), and the significance. The 100 point scales are constructed fro the items 11/15/2008 listed in Table 8.1. The 100-point media use scale combined www.pippanorris.com use of newspapers, radio/tv news, the internet, books, and magazines. P.*=.05 22 **=.01 ***=.001. See appendix A for details about the measurement, coding and construction of all variables. Significant coefficients are highlighted in bold. Source: World Values Survey 2005-7

Table 8.4: Multilevel regression models explaining liberal sexual and moral values INDIVIDUAL LEVEL Demographic characteristics Cosmopolitanism index Globalization index Economic development Media Freedom Media access Age (years) -2.17*** -2.17*** -2.17*** -2.17*** -2.17*** (.099) (.099) (.099) (.099) (.099) Gender (male=1).064.064.064.064.064 (.090) (.090) (.090) (.090) (.090) Socioeconomic resources Household income 10-pt scale 1.25*** 1.25*** 1.25*** 1.25*** 1.25*** (.107) (.107) (.107) (.107) (.107) Media use NATIONAL-LEVEL Education 9-pt scale 1.66*** 1.66*** 1.66*** 1.66*** 1.66*** (.115) (.115) (.115) (.115) (.115) News media use scale.936***.936***.936***.936***.936*** (.112) (.112) (.112) (.112) (.112) Cosmopolitanism index 8.84*** (Globalization+ Development+ (1.47) Freedom) Globalization index 10.01*** (1.61) Economic development 9.14*** (1.52) Media freedom 10.64*** (1.60) Societal-level media access 6.65*** (1.64) CROSS-LEVEL INTERACTIONS Cosmopolitanism*media use.569***.579***.547***.583***.649*** (.109) (.109) (.123) (.109) (.085) Constant (intercept) 38.5 33.4 38.0 37.0 Schwartz BIC 380,457 380,455 380,457 380,453 380,457 11/15/2008 N. respondents 43,088 43,088 43,088 43,088 43,088 N. nations 37 www.pippanorris.com 37 37 37 23 37 24

Major findings: News media use is positively related to more liberal and secularsocial values Similar pattern evidence across diverse cultural dimensions Interaction effect: pattern clearest for some values for media users living in cosmopolitan societies Qualifications: Many other factors, not specified in the models, also contributetowards these attitudes and values This analysis focuses on the impact of the news media, not examining the use of entertainment media Self-selection bias or interaction effects? Policy implications for protecting cultural diversity? Is the globalization of news media a threat to national diversity? More details: www.pippanorris.com 25 26