Changes in social norms during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic across 43 countries

Peer Reviewed
16 February 2024

Nature Communications

Giulia Andrighetto, Francisco Morales, Seniha Özden, Evgeny Osin, Ike E. Onyishi, Nneoma G. Onyedire, Ravit Nussinson, Kohei Nitta, Jayanth Narayanan, Sari Mentser, Oleksandr Pereverziev, Maria Luisa Mendes Teixeira, Imed Medhioub, Michele McArdle, Pavan Mamidi, Angela T. Maitner, Marco Tullio Liuzza, Kadi Liik, Penny Panagiotopoulou, Lorena R. Perez-Floriano, Lisa M. Leslie, Brent Simpson, Qing-peng Zhang, Rizqy Amelia Zein, Fiona Fira Winata, Paul A. M. Van Lange, Giovanni A. Travaglino, Eftychia Stamkou, Lorenzo Spadoni, Sara Sherbaji, Anna-Maija Pirttilä-Backman, Angel Sánchez, Inari Sakki, Pedro P. Romero, Sara Romanò, Ricardo Borges Rodrigues, Cecilia Reyna, Jana Raver, Marianna Pogosyan, Yang Li, Diana León, Aron Szekely, Elizaveta Berezina, Piyanjali de Zoysa, Mícheál de Barra, Đorđe Čekrlija, Juan Camilo Cárdenas, Huyen Thi Thu Bui, Paweł Boski, Sheyla Blumen, Anabel Belaus, Jan B. Engelmann, Dana Basnight-Brown, Davide Barrera, Shweta Bankar, Zeynep Aycan, Gizem Arikan, Jered Abernathy, Michele Gelfand, Andrea Guido, Angela Dorrough, Hyun Euh, Natalia Kharchenko, Hirofumi Hashimoto, Narine Khachatryan, Yoshihisa Kashima, Hansika Kapoor, Yoshio Kamijo, Hirotaka Imada, Martina Hřebíčková, Tim Hopthrow, Katarzyna Growiec, Susann Fiedler, Ani Grigoryan, Sylvie Graf, Andreas Glöckner, Colin Mathew Hugues D. Gill, Ragna B. Gardarsdottir, Marta Fülöp, Gonçalo Freitas, Olivia Foster-Gimbel, Kimmo Eriksson

AbstractThe emergence of COVID-19 dramatically changed social behavior across societies and contexts. Here we study whether social norms also changed. Specifically, we study this question for cultural tightness (the degree to which societies generally have strong norms), specific social norms (e.g. stealing, hand washing), and norms about enforcement, using survey data from 30,431 respondents in 43 countries recorded before and in the early stages following the emergence of COVID-19. Using variation in disease intensity, we shed light on the mechanisms predicting changes in social norm measures. We find evidence that, after the emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic, hand washing norms increased while tightness and punishing frequency slightly decreased but observe no evidence for a robust change in most other norms. Thus, at least in the short term, our findings suggest that cultures are largely stable to pandemic threats except in those norms, hand washing in this case, that are perceived to be directly relevant to dealing with the collective threat.

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Andrighetto, G., Szekely, A., Guido, A., Gelfand, M., Abernathy, J., Arikan, G., Aycan, Z., Bankar, S., Barrera, D., Basnight-Brown, D., Belaus, A., Berezina, E., Blumen, S., Boski, P., Bui, H. T. T., Cárdenas, J. C., Čekrlija, Đ., de Barra, M., de Zoysa, P., … Eriksson, K. (2024). Changes in social norms during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic across 43 countries. Nature Communications, 15(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-44999-5
Publication | 22 April 2024