You bring forward a lot of great stuff about international cross-cultural, cross-continental divergences on gender related matters. I suspect quite a lot of it makes you appreciate being an American.
However, do you have, or will you be sharing any research results or insights about divergences about gender related matters *within* the United States, at the aspirational level, or lived experience level, across geographic regional lines, socioeconomic class lines, racial lines, generational lines, educational lines, religious, political, or any other demographic factors?
> Latin Americans and Italians (for example) think corruption is very high (as shown in the map above).
Informative article, but minor correction: The CPI is a collation of (outside) expert assessments of corruption in a country, it's not a poll of Latins/Italians/etc. themselves on the level of corruption in Latam/Italy/etc. Though the point should still be true because there are good correlations between the CPI and country polls on perceived and experienced corruption.
Alice,
You bring forward a lot of great stuff about international cross-cultural, cross-continental divergences on gender related matters. I suspect quite a lot of it makes you appreciate being an American.
However, do you have, or will you be sharing any research results or insights about divergences about gender related matters *within* the United States, at the aspirational level, or lived experience level, across geographic regional lines, socioeconomic class lines, racial lines, generational lines, educational lines, religious, political, or any other demographic factors?
I am English
Pardon me while I remove my foot from my mouth. Sorry!
Forgiven!
> Latin Americans and Italians (for example) think corruption is very high (as shown in the map above).
Informative article, but minor correction: The CPI is a collation of (outside) expert assessments of corruption in a country, it's not a poll of Latins/Italians/etc. themselves on the level of corruption in Latam/Italy/etc. Though the point should still be true because there are good correlations between the CPI and country polls on perceived and experienced corruption.