Authors
Shalom H Schwartz, Klaus Boehnke
Publication date
2004/6/1
Journal
Journal of research in personality
Volume
38
Issue
3
Pages
230-255
Publisher
Academic Press
Description
This is the first statistical test of a theory of the structure of human values (Schwartz, 1992). The theory postulates that 10 basic values are discriminated in all societies and that these values form a quasi-circumplex structure based on the inherent conflict or compatibility between their motivational goals. Past support for the theory came from subjective judgments of visual plots of the relations among value items in samples from over 60 countries. We formally test the postulated structure and several potential refinements. We employ a specially designed confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) approach with new data from two sets of 23 samples from 27 countries (N=10,857). In both data sets, CFAs confirm the 10 basic values, a modified quasi-circumplex rather than a simple circumplex structure, and the claim that values form a motivational continuum.
Total citations
200520062007200820092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320241624515977738112211811614313311910611514095828339
Scholar articles