Martens Jason P
Department of Psychology, Capilano University, North Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Cross Cult Res. 2023 Feb;57(1):56-73. doi: 10.1177/10693971221134181.
Historical cultural practices that no longer exist can have modern day effects. Because communism has been linked with distrust of government, it was hypothesized that (a) historical communism would be negatively associated with COVID-19 vaccination rates, and (b) trust in government would mediate the association. Two studies assessed these hypotheses. Study 1 tested the hypotheses among European, Asian, and African countries, while Study 2 focused on East and West Germany within Europe. All samples except Africa found support for an association between historical communism and lower COVID-19 vaccination rates. However, trust in government did not mediate the association in Study 1, though a significant indirect effect did emerge within Germany in Study 2. Associations held controlling for GDP and age of population. Together, the studies suggest that historical communism in Europe and Asia is associated with real-world behavior today, and that trust in government might be partly responsible for the effect within Germany but less likely within Europe as a whole.
已经不复存在的历史文化习俗可能会产生现代影响。由于共产主义一直与对政府的不信任联系在一起,因此有人提出假设:(a)历史上的共产主义会与新冠疫苗接种率呈负相关,以及(b)对政府的信任会在这种关联中起中介作用。两项研究对这些假设进行了评估。研究1在欧洲、亚洲和非洲国家检验了这些假设,而研究2则聚焦于欧洲的东德和西德。除非洲外的所有样本都发现历史上的共产主义与较低的新冠疫苗接种率之间存在关联。然而,在研究1中,对政府的信任并未在这种关联中起中介作用,尽管在研究2中德国境内确实出现了显著的间接效应。在控制了国内生产总值和人口年龄后,这种关联依然存在。总体而言,这些研究表明,欧洲和亚洲的历史共产主义与当今的现实行为有关,并且对政府的信任可能在德国境内的这种影响中部分起作用,但在整个欧洲范围内可能性较小。