2021
DOI: 10.1080/07036337.2021.1956915
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A community of shared values? Dimensions and dynamics of cultural integration in the European Union

Abstract: The series of recent crises (EURO, refugees, backsliding, Brexit) challenge the self-portrayal of the European Union (EU) as a community of shared values. Against this backdrop, we analyse European Values Study data from 1990 till 2020 to assess the level and change in publics' acceptance of the EU's officially propagated values: personal freedom, individual autonomy, social solidarity, ethnic tolerance, civic honesty, gender equality and liberal democracy. We find that EU publics support these values strongly… Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(10 citation statements)
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References 45 publications
(71 reference statements)
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“…In relation to the above, the cultural and social climate of a society co-determines the attitudes of individuals, as well as values, and behaviors ( Halman and Gelissen, 2019 ; Akaliyski et al, 2021 ; Spitsyna and Koval, 2022 ). The results reveal that traditional and self-expressive values encourage adherence to voluntary organizations.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In relation to the above, the cultural and social climate of a society co-determines the attitudes of individuals, as well as values, and behaviors ( Halman and Gelissen, 2019 ; Akaliyski et al, 2021 ; Spitsyna and Koval, 2022 ). The results reveal that traditional and self-expressive values encourage adherence to voluntary organizations.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The attempt to create a Yugoslav man ultimately did not work out well, while the EU still has the chance to subtly encourage the emergence of a European identity among young people through various, unobtrusive instruments. Given the great value distance between different cultural circles in the EU and a widening gap between Member States on issues of personal freedoms, ethnic tolerance, and gender equality (Akaliyski et al, 2022), and the discrepancies between civic and ethnic conceptions of European identity (Bruter, 2012), the EU will find it increasingly difficult to nurture a shared understanding of European identity. The aftermath of the Maastricht Treaty, and EU's multiple crises that ensued, increased the politicization of European integration, which strongly affects EU identity politics, and therefore the understanding of what European identity should contain is not unique (Hooghe and Marks, 2009).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Questions 2 and 3 are traditionally included in the morally debatable behaviour scale (Crissman, 1942; Harding and Phillips, 1986) and refer to the justifiability of homosexuality and abortion respectively. Both are measured on a ten‐point scale with higher scores indicating higher levels of permissiveness (Akaliyski and Welzel, 2020; Akaliyski et al ., 2021; Welzel, 2013). Question 4 measures whether respondents believe employers should give priority to own nationals rather than immigrants (yes is coded as 1, and no as 0).…”
Section: Methods and Datamentioning
confidence: 99%