Thornton Arland, Pierotti Rachael S, Young-DeMarco Linda, Watkins Susan
Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
California Population Center, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Popul Res Policy Rev. 2014 Oct 1;33(5):693-716. doi: 10.1007/s11113-014-9322-0.
This paper examines the extent to which developmental idealism has been disseminated in Malawi. Developmental idealism is a set of beliefs and values about development and the relationships between development and family structures and behavior. Developmental idealism states that attributes of societies and families defined as modern are better than attributes defined as traditional, that modern societies help produce modern families, that modern families facilitate the achievement of modern societies, and that the future will bring family change in the direction of modernity. Previous research has demonstrated that knowledge of developmental idealism is widespread in many places around the world, but provides little systematic data about it in sub-Saharan Africa or how knowledge of it is associated with certain demographic characteristics in that region. In this paper, we address this issue by examining whether ordinary people in two settings in Malawi, a sub-Saharan African country, have received and understood messages that are intended to associate development with certain types of family forms and family behaviors. We then examine associations between demographic characteristics and developmental idealism to investigate possible mechanisms linking global discourse about development to the grassroots. We analyze data collected in face-to-face surveys from two samples of Malawian men in 2009 and 2010, one rural, the other in a low-to-medium income neighborhood of a city. Our analysis of these survey data shows considerable evidence that many developmental idealism beliefs have been spread in that country and that education has positive effects on beliefs in the association between development and family attributes. We also find higher levels of developmental idealism awareness in the urban sample than we do in the rural sample, but once dissimilarities in education and wealth between the two samples are controlled, awareness levels no longer differed between urban and rural respondents. We explore how these beliefs intersect with longstanding local values and beliefs in Malawi.
本文考察了发展理想主义在马拉维的传播程度。发展理想主义是一套关于发展以及发展与家庭结构和行为之间关系的信念和价值观。发展理想主义认为,被定义为现代的社会和家庭属性优于被定义为传统的属性,现代社会有助于产生现代家庭,现代家庭促进现代社会的实现,并且未来家庭将朝着现代性的方向变化。此前的研究表明,发展理想主义的知识在世界许多地方广泛传播,但在撒哈拉以南非洲地区,关于它的系统性数据很少,也没有关于该地区这种知识如何与某些人口特征相关联的数据。在本文中,我们通过考察撒哈拉以南非洲国家马拉维两个地区的普通人是否接受并理解了旨在将发展与某些家庭形式和家庭行为联系起来的信息,来解决这个问题。然后,我们考察人口特征与发展理想主义之间的关联,以探究将全球发展话语与基层联系起来的可能机制。我们分析了2009年和2010年从马拉维男性的两个样本中通过面对面调查收集的数据,一个样本来自农村,另一个来自城市中低收入社区。我们对这些调查数据的分析显示,有大量证据表明许多发展理想主义信念在该国已经传播开来,并且教育对发展与家庭属性之间关联的信念有积极影响。我们还发现城市样本中的发展理想主义意识水平高于农村样本,但一旦控制了两个样本在教育和财富方面的差异,城市和农村受访者的意识水平就不再有差异。我们探讨了这些信念如何与马拉维长期存在的地方价值观和信念相互交织。