A comparative study on culture-specific and cross-cultural aspects of intercultural relations in Hungary, Serbia, Czech Republic, and Germany
Authors
Genkova, Petia
Herbst, Jonathan
Schreiber, Henrik
Rašticová, Martina

Poor, Jozsef
Veresné, Klara Valentinyi

Suhajda, Csilla
Viszetenvelt, Andrea
Bjekić, Jovana

Article (Published version)
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The ability, will, and belief that it is possible to deal effectively with members of other cultural/ethnic groups are still gaining importance all over the world. However, the majority of studies on intercultural relations focus on Western Europe and the USA, applying constructs and theories that replicate a western-centered worldview. As a consequence, it is unclear whether established measures for intergroup attitudes and intercultural competence may be applied in Eastern European countries and to what extent they display comparable ideas, thoughts, and feelings. The current study thus explores cross-cultural commonalities and differences in established measures of ethnic identity, prejudice, acculturation strategies, intercultural intelligence, and multicultural personality. Therefore, we compare the scale structure, difficulty, and sensitivity in samples from Germany and the Eastern European countries Hungary, Serbia, and the Czech Republic (etic-perspective), as well as the cultu...re-specific conceptions of said concepts (emic-perspective). Results show that the investigated scales do not work comparably across German and Eastern European samples. Differences might be rooted in variations of underlying thinking patterns and connotations of single expressions. Those variations are likely to be related to the constant individual societal and historical developments of cultures, shaping the way individuals think and talk about cultural diversity. Future studies are encouraged to consider culture-specific and generalizable aspects of constructs when conducting cross-cultural research on intercultural relations.
Keywords:
ethnic identity / prejudice / acculturation / cultural intelligence / multicultural personality / measurement equivalenceSource:
Frontiers in Psychology, 2022, 13, 886100-Publisher:
- Frontiers Media S.A.
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Institut za medicinska istraživanjaTY - JOUR AU - Genkova, Petia AU - Herbst, Jonathan AU - Schreiber, Henrik AU - Rašticová, Martina AU - Poor, Jozsef AU - Veresné, Klara Valentinyi AU - Suhajda, Csilla AU - Viszetenvelt, Andrea AU - Bjekić, Jovana PY - 2022 UR - http://rimi.imi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1331 AB - The ability, will, and belief that it is possible to deal effectively with members of other cultural/ethnic groups are still gaining importance all over the world. However, the majority of studies on intercultural relations focus on Western Europe and the USA, applying constructs and theories that replicate a western-centered worldview. As a consequence, it is unclear whether established measures for intergroup attitudes and intercultural competence may be applied in Eastern European countries and to what extent they display comparable ideas, thoughts, and feelings. The current study thus explores cross-cultural commonalities and differences in established measures of ethnic identity, prejudice, acculturation strategies, intercultural intelligence, and multicultural personality. Therefore, we compare the scale structure, difficulty, and sensitivity in samples from Germany and the Eastern European countries Hungary, Serbia, and the Czech Republic (etic-perspective), as well as the culture-specific conceptions of said concepts (emic-perspective). Results show that the investigated scales do not work comparably across German and Eastern European samples. Differences might be rooted in variations of underlying thinking patterns and connotations of single expressions. Those variations are likely to be related to the constant individual societal and historical developments of cultures, shaping the way individuals think and talk about cultural diversity. Future studies are encouraged to consider culture-specific and generalizable aspects of constructs when conducting cross-cultural research on intercultural relations. PB - Frontiers Media S.A. T2 - Frontiers in Psychology T2 - Frontiers in Psychology T1 - A comparative study on culture-specific and cross-cultural aspects of intercultural relations in Hungary, Serbia, Czech Republic, and Germany SP - 886100 VL - 13 DO - 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.886100 ER -
@article{ author = "Genkova, Petia and Herbst, Jonathan and Schreiber, Henrik and Rašticová, Martina and Poor, Jozsef and Veresné, Klara Valentinyi and Suhajda, Csilla and Viszetenvelt, Andrea and Bjekić, Jovana", year = "2022", abstract = "The ability, will, and belief that it is possible to deal effectively with members of other cultural/ethnic groups are still gaining importance all over the world. However, the majority of studies on intercultural relations focus on Western Europe and the USA, applying constructs and theories that replicate a western-centered worldview. As a consequence, it is unclear whether established measures for intergroup attitudes and intercultural competence may be applied in Eastern European countries and to what extent they display comparable ideas, thoughts, and feelings. The current study thus explores cross-cultural commonalities and differences in established measures of ethnic identity, prejudice, acculturation strategies, intercultural intelligence, and multicultural personality. Therefore, we compare the scale structure, difficulty, and sensitivity in samples from Germany and the Eastern European countries Hungary, Serbia, and the Czech Republic (etic-perspective), as well as the culture-specific conceptions of said concepts (emic-perspective). Results show that the investigated scales do not work comparably across German and Eastern European samples. Differences might be rooted in variations of underlying thinking patterns and connotations of single expressions. Those variations are likely to be related to the constant individual societal and historical developments of cultures, shaping the way individuals think and talk about cultural diversity. Future studies are encouraged to consider culture-specific and generalizable aspects of constructs when conducting cross-cultural research on intercultural relations.", publisher = "Frontiers Media S.A.", journal = "Frontiers in Psychology, Frontiers in Psychology", title = "A comparative study on culture-specific and cross-cultural aspects of intercultural relations in Hungary, Serbia, Czech Republic, and Germany", pages = "886100", volume = "13", doi = "10.3389/fpsyg.2022.886100" }
Genkova, P., Herbst, J., Schreiber, H., Rašticová, M., Poor, J., Veresné, K. V., Suhajda, C., Viszetenvelt, A.,& Bjekić, J.. (2022). A comparative study on culture-specific and cross-cultural aspects of intercultural relations in Hungary, Serbia, Czech Republic, and Germany. in Frontiers in Psychology Frontiers Media S.A.., 13, 886100. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.886100
Genkova P, Herbst J, Schreiber H, Rašticová M, Poor J, Veresné KV, Suhajda C, Viszetenvelt A, Bjekić J. A comparative study on culture-specific and cross-cultural aspects of intercultural relations in Hungary, Serbia, Czech Republic, and Germany. in Frontiers in Psychology. 2022;13:886100. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2022.886100 .
Genkova, Petia, Herbst, Jonathan, Schreiber, Henrik, Rašticová, Martina, Poor, Jozsef, Veresné, Klara Valentinyi, Suhajda, Csilla, Viszetenvelt, Andrea, Bjekić, Jovana, "A comparative study on culture-specific and cross-cultural aspects of intercultural relations in Hungary, Serbia, Czech Republic, and Germany" in Frontiers in Psychology, 13 (2022):886100, https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.886100 . .