Gender attitudes in the Arab region - The role of framing and priming effects

Autor: Micheline Goedhuys, Ann-Kristin Reitmann, Michael Grimm, Eleonora Nillesen
Přispěvatelé: Maastricht Graduate School of Governance, RS: GSBE MGSoG
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2020
Předmět:
Economics and Econometrics
Interviewer effects
Sociology and Political Science
Interview
o12 - Microeconomic Analyses of Economic Development
Randomized experiment
INTERVIEWER GENDER
d91 - "Intertemporal Consumer Choice
Life Cycle Models and Saving"
EMPOWERMENT
Poison control
CONSUMPTION MEASUREMENT
Suicide prevention
050105 experimental psychology
Religiosity
Gender attitudes
c99 - Design of Experiments: Other
Survey Methods
Sampling Methods
QUESTIONS
0502 economics and business
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
050207 economics
INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE
Applied Psychology
Interviewer Effect
MENA region
Design of Experiments: Other
05 social sciences
WOMEN
SURVEY RESPONSES
Microeconomic Analyses of Economic Development
Framing (social sciences)
OPINION
Priming
Domestic violence
Intertemporal Consumer Choice
Life Cycle Models and Saving
Framing
Psychology
Social psychology
c83 - "Survey Methods
Sampling Methods"
Survey experiment
Zdroj: Journal of Economic Psychology, 80:102288. Elsevier Science
ISSN: 0167-4870
Popis: Most evidence on survey response effects is based in the Western world. We use data from two randomized experiments built into a nation-wide representative household survey in Tunisia to analyze the effects of framing and priming on responses to gender attitudes in the Arab context. Our first experiment shows that questions on attitudes towards decision-making power when framed in an equality frame reduce responses in favor of gender inequality. In our second experiment we find that responses to attitudes towards domestic violence are susceptible to an audio primer. Oral statistical information about the incidence of domestic violence in Tunisia increases disapproval of domestic violence among the male subsample further, but does not affect women. In terms of impact heterogeneity, we find mixed results for treatment interventions interacting with the gender of the interviewer and the interviewer’s perceived religiosity.
Databáze: OpenAIRE