Article (Journal/Review)
Comparing regional cultures within a country: lessons from Brazil
Fecha
2010-05-10Registro en:
1945-7669 / 1945-7685
10.1177/0022022109359696
000276646200005
Autor
Hofstede, Geert H.
Hilal, Adriana
Malvezzi, Sigmar
Tanure, Betania
Vinken, Henk
Institución
Resumen
In this joint article we test the common assumption that a measure of culture developed for the national level can also be used for comparing regions within a country. Three different research projects independently measured culture differences within the Federal Republic of Brazil, all three using a version of Hofstede's Values Survey Module (VSM). The largest provided separate scores for all of Brazil's 27 states, the next largest for 17 of the more populous states. Factor analyses of VSM item scores across states in both cases only very partly replicated Hofstede's cross-national dimension structure; only Individualism versus Collectivism reappeared clearly. We attribute this lack of fit to a restriction of range of VSM item scores among states within a common Brazilian national culture. The item scores did show a cultural clustering of states that fairly closely followed the administrative division of the country into five regions. The culture profiles for these regions show remarkable differences between the Northeast with its Afro-Brazilian roots and the North with its native Indian roots. On the issue of comparing regional cultures, we found the VSM, based on global differences, too coarse a net for catching the finer cultural nuances between Brazilian states. Adding locally defined items would have made the studies more meaningful to Brazilians.