TY - JOUR
T1 - Everyday norms have become more permissive over time and vary across cultures
AU - Eriksson, Kimmo
AU - Strimling, Pontus
AU - Vartanova, Irina
AU - Simpson, Brent
AU - Persson, Minna
AU - Abdi, Khalid Ahmed
AU - Ad, Neta
AU - Aldashev, Alisher
AU - Ali, Habib Mohammad
AU - Alì, Maurizio
AU - Aliyev, Khatai
AU - Alrefaee, Yasser M. H. A.
AU - Ortiz, Alberth Estuardo Alvarado
AU - Andersson, Per A.
AU - Andrighetto, Giulia
AU - Arikan, Gizem
AU - Aruta, John Jamir Benzon R.
AU - Ayikwa, Christian Lutete
AU - Baños-Chaparro, Jonatan
AU - Barrera, Davide
AU - Barsyte, Justina
AU - Batkeyev, Birzhan
AU - Batool, Azma
AU - Berezina, Elizaveta
AU - Bimina, Stéphanie Ngandu
AU - Björnstjerna, Marie
AU - Blumen, Sheyla
AU - Boski, Paweł
AU - Boštjančič, Eva
AU - Boum, Yap
AU - Briguglio, Marie
AU - Bruno, Kagonbe
AU - Bui, Huyen Thi Thu
AU - Caycho-Rodríguez, Tomás
AU - Chen, Yanyan
AU - Chiweshe, Manase Kudzai
AU - Choi, Hoon-Seok
AU - Contreras-Ibáñez, Carlos C.
AU - Čorkalo, Dinka
AU - Cruz-Torres, Christian E.
AU - Czakó, Andrea
AU - de Zoysa, Piyanjali
AU - Demetrovics, Zsolt
AU - Dinić, Bojana M.
AU - Drače, Saša
AU - El-Haddad, Rita W.
AU - Engelmann, Jan B.
AU - Pérez, Ignacio Escudero
AU - Euh, Hyun
AU - Fang, Xia
AU - Frank, Celine
AU - López López, Wilson
AU - Rodríguez-Romero, Juan Diego
N1 - © 2025. The Author(s).
PY - 2025/10/7
Y1 - 2025/10/7
N2 - Abstract Every social situation that people encounter in their daily lives comes with a set of unwritten rules about what behavior is considered appropriate or inappropriate. These everyday norms can vary across societies: some societies may have more permissive norms in general or for certain behaviors, or for certain behaviors in specific situations. In a preregistered survey of 25,422 participants across 90 societies, we map societal differences in 150 everyday norms and show that they can be explained by how societies prioritize individualizing moral foundations such as care and liberty versus binding moral foundations such as purity. Specifically, societies with more individualistic morality tend to have more permissive norms in general (greater liberty) and especially for behaviors deemed vulgar (less purity), but they exhibit less permissive norms for behaviors perceived to have negative consequences in specific situations (greater care). By comparing our data with available data collected twenty years ago, we find a global pattern of change toward more permissive norms overall but less permissive norms for the most vulgar and inconsiderate behaviors. This study explains how social norms vary across behaviors, situations, societies, and time.
AB - Abstract Every social situation that people encounter in their daily lives comes with a set of unwritten rules about what behavior is considered appropriate or inappropriate. These everyday norms can vary across societies: some societies may have more permissive norms in general or for certain behaviors, or for certain behaviors in specific situations. In a preregistered survey of 25,422 participants across 90 societies, we map societal differences in 150 everyday norms and show that they can be explained by how societies prioritize individualizing moral foundations such as care and liberty versus binding moral foundations such as purity. Specifically, societies with more individualistic morality tend to have more permissive norms in general (greater liberty) and especially for behaviors deemed vulgar (less purity), but they exhibit less permissive norms for behaviors perceived to have negative consequences in specific situations (greater care). By comparing our data with available data collected twenty years ago, we find a global pattern of change toward more permissive norms overall but less permissive norms for the most vulgar and inconsiderate behaviors. This study explains how social norms vary across behaviors, situations, societies, and time.
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s44271-025-00324-4
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/aa5e554a-aa23-3fd9-b2e5-2c781cbaf065/
U2 - 10.1038/s44271-025-00324-4
DO - 10.1038/s44271-025-00324-4
M3 - Article
C2 - 41057696
SN - 2731-9121
VL - 3
JO - Communications Psychology
JF - Communications Psychology
IS - 1
ER -