Does exposure to other cultures affect the impact of economic globalization on gender equality?

Citation:

Pazit Ben-Nun Bloom, Gilad, Sharon , and Freedman, Michael . 2017. “Does Exposure To Other Cultures Affect The Impact Of Economic Globalization On Gender Equality?”. International Political Science Review, 38, 3, Pp. 378–395. doi:10.1177/0192512116644358.

Abstract:

An extensive literature shows that economic globalization has a positive effect on gender equality. However, the effect varies greatly across countries and time. This article argues that social globalization – individuals' exposure to external ideas, people, and information flows – and the changes in values associated with it – is a key boundary condition for the effect of economic globalization on women's rights. While economic globalization opens up new opportunities for women, policy adaptation to these changes requires a social demand for efforts for change. Social globalization contributes to policy adaptation by exposing the public to alternative gender-role models, setting off a shift in values, which underlies support for gender equality. Results emerging from a time-series-cross-sectional analysis of 152 nations for the period 1990–2003 confirm that the positive effect of economic globalization on gender equality wanes at lower levels of social globalization. Further, multilevel-path-analyses models demonstrate how changes to individual-level values mediate the effect of globalization on individuals' support for gender equality.