Revisiting the measurement of anomie

Sociologists coined the term “anomie” to describe societies that are characterized by disintegration and deregulation. Extending beyond conceptualizations of anomie that conflate the measurements of anomie as ‘a state of society’ and as a ‘state of mind’, we disentangle these conceptualizations and...

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Main Authors: Teymoori, Ali, Jetten, Jolanda, Bastian, Brock, Ariyanto, Amarina, Autin, Frédérique, Ayub, Nadia, Badea, Constantina, Besta, Tomasz, Butera, Fabrizio, Costa-Lopes, Rui, Cui, Lijuan, Fantini, Carole, Finchilescu, Gillian, Gaertner, Lowell, Gollwitzer, Mario, Gómez, Ángel, González, Roberto, Hong, Ying Yi, Jensen, Dorthe Høj, Karasawa, Minoru, Kessler, Thomas, Klein, Olivier, Lima, Marcus, Mähönen, Tuuli Anna, Megevand, Laura, Morton, Thomas, Paladino, Paola, Polya, Tibor, Ruza, Aleksejs, Shahrazad, Wan, Sharma, Sushama, Torres, Ana Raquel, van der Bles, Anne Marthe, Wohl, Michael
Other Authors: Eriksson, Kimmo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/88332
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/46908
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-883322023-05-19T06:44:40Z Revisiting the measurement of anomie Teymoori, Ali Jetten, Jolanda Bastian, Brock Ariyanto, Amarina Autin, Frédérique Ayub, Nadia Badea, Constantina Besta, Tomasz Butera, Fabrizio Costa-Lopes, Rui Cui, Lijuan Fantini, Carole Finchilescu, Gillian Gaertner, Lowell Gollwitzer, Mario Gómez, Ángel González, Roberto Hong, Ying Yi Jensen, Dorthe Høj Karasawa, Minoru Kessler, Thomas Klein, Olivier Lima, Marcus Mähönen, Tuuli Anna Megevand, Laura Morton, Thomas Paladino, Paola Polya, Tibor Ruza, Aleksejs Shahrazad, Wan Sharma, Sushama Torres, Ana Raquel van der Bles, Anne Marthe Wohl, Michael Eriksson, Kimmo Nanyang Business School Anomie DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology Socioeconomics Sociologists coined the term “anomie” to describe societies that are characterized by disintegration and deregulation. Extending beyond conceptualizations of anomie that conflate the measurements of anomie as ‘a state of society’ and as a ‘state of mind’, we disentangle these conceptualizations and develop an analysis and measure of this phenomenon focusing on anomie as a perception of the ‘state of society’. We propose that anomie encompasses two dimensions: a perceived breakdown in social fabric (i.e., disintegration as lack of trust and erosion of moral standards) and a perceived breakdown in leadership (i.e., deregulation as lack of legitimacy and effectiveness of leadership). Across six studies we present evidence for the validity of the new measure, the Perception of Anomie Scale (PAS). Studies 1a and 1b provide evidence for the proposed factor structure and internal consistency of PAS. Studies 2a-c provide evidence of convergent and discriminant validity. Finally, assessing PAS in 28 countries, we show that PAS correlates with national indicators of societal functioning and that PAS predicts national identification and well-being (Studies 3a & 3b). The broader implications of the anomie construct for the study of group processes are discussed. Published version 2018-12-11T07:32:33Z 2019-12-06T17:00:56Z 2018-12-11T07:32:33Z 2019-12-06T17:00:56Z 2016 Journal Article Teymoori, A., Jetten, J., Bastian, B., Ariyanto, A., Autin, F., Ayub, N., . . . Wohl, M. (2016). Revisiting the measurement of anomie. PLOS ONE, 11(7), e0158370-. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0158370 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/88332 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/46908 10.1371/journal.pone.0158370 27383133 en PLOS ONE This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 public domain dedication. 27 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Anomie
DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology
Socioeconomics
spellingShingle Anomie
DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology
Socioeconomics
Teymoori, Ali
Jetten, Jolanda
Bastian, Brock
Ariyanto, Amarina
Autin, Frédérique
Ayub, Nadia
Badea, Constantina
Besta, Tomasz
Butera, Fabrizio
Costa-Lopes, Rui
Cui, Lijuan
Fantini, Carole
Finchilescu, Gillian
Gaertner, Lowell
Gollwitzer, Mario
Gómez, Ángel
González, Roberto
Hong, Ying Yi
Jensen, Dorthe Høj
Karasawa, Minoru
Kessler, Thomas
Klein, Olivier
Lima, Marcus
Mähönen, Tuuli Anna
Megevand, Laura
Morton, Thomas
Paladino, Paola
Polya, Tibor
Ruza, Aleksejs
Shahrazad, Wan
Sharma, Sushama
Torres, Ana Raquel
van der Bles, Anne Marthe
Wohl, Michael
Revisiting the measurement of anomie
description Sociologists coined the term “anomie” to describe societies that are characterized by disintegration and deregulation. Extending beyond conceptualizations of anomie that conflate the measurements of anomie as ‘a state of society’ and as a ‘state of mind’, we disentangle these conceptualizations and develop an analysis and measure of this phenomenon focusing on anomie as a perception of the ‘state of society’. We propose that anomie encompasses two dimensions: a perceived breakdown in social fabric (i.e., disintegration as lack of trust and erosion of moral standards) and a perceived breakdown in leadership (i.e., deregulation as lack of legitimacy and effectiveness of leadership). Across six studies we present evidence for the validity of the new measure, the Perception of Anomie Scale (PAS). Studies 1a and 1b provide evidence for the proposed factor structure and internal consistency of PAS. Studies 2a-c provide evidence of convergent and discriminant validity. Finally, assessing PAS in 28 countries, we show that PAS correlates with national indicators of societal functioning and that PAS predicts national identification and well-being (Studies 3a & 3b). The broader implications of the anomie construct for the study of group processes are discussed.
author2 Eriksson, Kimmo
author_facet Eriksson, Kimmo
Teymoori, Ali
Jetten, Jolanda
Bastian, Brock
Ariyanto, Amarina
Autin, Frédérique
Ayub, Nadia
Badea, Constantina
Besta, Tomasz
Butera, Fabrizio
Costa-Lopes, Rui
Cui, Lijuan
Fantini, Carole
Finchilescu, Gillian
Gaertner, Lowell
Gollwitzer, Mario
Gómez, Ángel
González, Roberto
Hong, Ying Yi
Jensen, Dorthe Høj
Karasawa, Minoru
Kessler, Thomas
Klein, Olivier
Lima, Marcus
Mähönen, Tuuli Anna
Megevand, Laura
Morton, Thomas
Paladino, Paola
Polya, Tibor
Ruza, Aleksejs
Shahrazad, Wan
Sharma, Sushama
Torres, Ana Raquel
van der Bles, Anne Marthe
Wohl, Michael
format Article
author Teymoori, Ali
Jetten, Jolanda
Bastian, Brock
Ariyanto, Amarina
Autin, Frédérique
Ayub, Nadia
Badea, Constantina
Besta, Tomasz
Butera, Fabrizio
Costa-Lopes, Rui
Cui, Lijuan
Fantini, Carole
Finchilescu, Gillian
Gaertner, Lowell
Gollwitzer, Mario
Gómez, Ángel
González, Roberto
Hong, Ying Yi
Jensen, Dorthe Høj
Karasawa, Minoru
Kessler, Thomas
Klein, Olivier
Lima, Marcus
Mähönen, Tuuli Anna
Megevand, Laura
Morton, Thomas
Paladino, Paola
Polya, Tibor
Ruza, Aleksejs
Shahrazad, Wan
Sharma, Sushama
Torres, Ana Raquel
van der Bles, Anne Marthe
Wohl, Michael
author_sort Teymoori, Ali
title Revisiting the measurement of anomie
title_short Revisiting the measurement of anomie
title_full Revisiting the measurement of anomie
title_fullStr Revisiting the measurement of anomie
title_full_unstemmed Revisiting the measurement of anomie
title_sort revisiting the measurement of anomie
publishDate 2018
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/88332
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/46908
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