Maryland Population Research Center & Department of Sociology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA,
Demography. 2014 Feb;51(1):3-25. doi: 10.1007/s13524-013-0257-6.
Demography and culture have had a long but ambivalent relationship. Cultural influences are widely recognized as important for demographic outcomes but are often "backgrounded" in demographic research. I argue that progress toward a more successful integration is feasible and suggest a network model of culture as a potential tool. The network model bridges both traditional (holistic and institutional) and contemporary (tool kit) models of culture used in the social sciences and offers a simple vocabulary for a diverse set of cultural concepts, such as attitudes, beliefs, and norms, as well as quantitative measures of how culture is organized. The proposed model conceptualizes culture as a nested network of meanings represented by schemas that range in complexity from simple concepts to multifaceted cultural models. I illustrate the potential value of a model using accounts of the cultural changes underpinning the transformation of marriage in the United States and point to developments in the social, cognitive, and computational sciences that could facilitate the application of the model in empirical demographic research.
人口统计学和文化有着悠久但复杂的关系。文化影响被广泛认为对人口统计学结果很重要,但在人口统计学研究中往往被“淡化”。我认为,朝着更成功的融合方向取得进展是可行的,并提出了一种文化网络模型,作为一种潜在的工具。该网络模型弥合了社会科学中使用的传统(整体和制度)和当代(工具包)文化模型,并为一系列不同的文化概念提供了一个简单的词汇,例如态度、信仰和规范,以及文化组织的定量衡量标准。所提出的模型将文化概念化为一个由模式表示的嵌套的意义网络,模式的复杂性从简单的概念到多方面的文化模型不等。我使用了一些例子来说明文化变化如何为美国婚姻转型提供了基础,说明了该模型的潜在价值,并指出了社会、认知和计算科学的发展,这些发展可能有助于该模型在经验人口统计学研究中的应用。