North American Trajectory

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A01=Neil Nevitte
Age Group
Age Group
Age Group Figure
Age Group Figure
Author_Neil Nevitte
authority deference decline
Canada Mexico
Category=JPS
Civil Permissiveness
closer
Closer Economic Ties
comparative political culture
Continental Free Trade
Continental Political Union
Conventional Political Participation
cross-national survey data
Dur Ing
economic
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Fol Lowing
identity formation studies
intergenerational
Intergenerational Change
Intergenerational Population Replacement
Intergenerational Shift
Liberal Democratic Political Systems
mexican
Mexican Public
Mexican Sample
North American cultural integration trends
North American Peoples
population
Population Replacement
Postmaterialist Values
Proport Ion
public
replacement
Sexual Restrictiveness
sociostructural transformation
survey
Unconventional Political Action
United States
value convergence analysis
values
West Germany
world
World Values Survey

Product details

  • ISBN 9780202305578
  • Weight: 340g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Dec 1996
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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North America is steering a new course, with the United States, Canada, and Mexico moving toward continental economic, integration. This book examines basic value changes that are' transforming economic, social, and political life in these three countries, demonstrating that they are gradually adopting an increasingly compatible cultural perspective. A narrow nationalism, dominant since the 19th century, has slowly been giving way to a more cosmopolitan sense of identity. As old economic boundaries become outmoded, a North American perspective makes greater sense. To what extent, then, do the three North American publics - I each with its own heterogeneities and tensions - share a common culture? That question can only be answered if we have some yardstick by which to measure their cultural similarity. These societies are far from identical. But data from the 1990- 1991 World Values survey, drawn from 43 societies around the world, show that on crucial topics, the core values of the American public are significantly closer to those of the Canadians and (to a somewhat lesser extent) to those of the Mexicans, than they are to those of most other peoples in the world. Furthermore, time series evidence indicates that the values of the three North American publics have been converging. This book draws on a unique body of directly comparable cross-national and cross-temporal survey evidence to show that what Americans, Canadians, and Mexicans want out of life is changing in analogous ways. These changes, coupled with sociostructural transformations, are reshaping peoples' feelings about national identity, about trusting each other, and about the balance between economic and non-economic goals. North American economic integration is being reinforced by the gradual emergence of increasingly similar cultural values.

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