2013
DOI: 10.1177/1470595813485380
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Cultural identity and convergence on western attitudes and beliefs in the United Arab Emirates

Abstract: Studies of acculturation have assumed that, under pressure to assimilate, individuals will accommodate by adopting behavioural and attitudinal attributes of the local, dominant culture. In contrast, this empirical study based in the United Arab Emirates used an original survey instrument, together with a range of convergent analytic techniques, to demonstrate pervasive westernization in the Arab and subcontinental-dominant communities. In addition, the study demonstrates a novel use of multiple discriminant an… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…Regarding the research context, the UAE is a multicultural and multi-ethnic country that hosts expatriates (foreign residents) from more than 200 countries (Hills and Atkins, 2013). Its population is approximately 9.45 million.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Regarding the research context, the UAE is a multicultural and multi-ethnic country that hosts expatriates (foreign residents) from more than 200 countries (Hills and Atkins, 2013). Its population is approximately 9.45 million.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The cross-cultural community is divided, though, between expectations of convergence (Haire et al, 1966;Heuer et al, 1999;Hills and Atkins, 2013), and predictions that cultural differences will remain persistent and resilient (Huntington, 1996;Schaeffer, 2003). "Crossvergence" bridges these camps, arguing that sociocultural and business ideological trends produce a combinatory new value system (Ralston et al, 1993), evidence of which indicates the importance of recognizing such cultural dynamism (Kelley et al, 2006).…”
Section: Theoretical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Pour elles, il est important de se conformer aux coutumes issues de la culture traditionnelle ou de la religion, et d'éviter tout changement qui mettrait en péril l'harmonie de la société. Attachées aux traditions, elles associent la surconsommation de luxe à une perte d'identité due à l'occidentalisation de la société émirienne (Hills et Atkins, 2013) Les changements critiques auxquels la société émirienne a été confrontée après le boom pétrolier ont façonné deux générations distinctes. Nos répondantes les plus âgées montrent une attitude moins favorable à la consommation de luxe que les plus jeunes.…”
Section: Résultatsunclassified