Rule Makers, Rule Breakers: How Tight and Loose Cultures Wire Our World by Michele Gelfand
Author:Michele Gelfand [Gelfand, Michele]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: Psychology
ISBN: 9781501152955
Amazon: B07CL67RXJ
Barnesnoble: B07CL67RXJ
Goodreads: 39939300
Publisher: Scribner
Published: 2018-09-11T00:00:00+00:00
10
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Cultureâs Revenge and Global (Dis)Order
In January 2011, the world watched, stunned, as hundreds of thousands of Egyptian citizens ignited a nationwide revolution. Spanning all age groups, political backgrounds, and religious affiliations, the protesters assembled in Cairoâs major town square to demand the ousting of President Hosni Mubarak and the dismantling of thirty years of autocratic rule. Their rallying chants included âIllegitimate!â and âMubarak, go!â They used social media platforms to turn up the noise, globally broadcasting their uprising. âWe use Facebook to schedule the protests, Twitter to coordinate, and YouTube to tell the world,â explained one protesterâin a tweet, no less. Despite several violent clashes between police and demonstrators, hundreds of deaths, and thousands of injuries, the activists didnât give up. After eighteen days of protests, Mubarakâs authoritarian regime collapsed. The Egyptiansâ dream of a new government was finally being realized.
This dream, however, soon turned into a nightmare. Egyptâs first democratically elected leader, Mohamed Morsi, went rogue, granting his office dictatorial powers. By June 2014, heâd been ousted in a military coup, and Abdel Fattah el-Sisiâanother oppressive autocratâhad taken the reins. In 2017, human rights groups estimated that there might be as many as sixty thousand political prisoners in Egyptâs jails, a tenfold increase from Mubarakâs rule. New laws repressed protests, and Sisi issued decrees that granted him absolute power to silence his critics.
At first glance, Egyptâs U-turn toward dictatorship seems inexplicable. How did people who joined together with such hope and determination to overthrow a fiercely authoritarian president end up living under an even more autocratic leader?
Many recent societal disruptions around the worldâfrom the Arab Spring to ISIS to the populist wave in politicsâhave stemmed in part from the structural stress of tight-loose tension. While all of these upheavals have unique elements, each demonstrates a simple truth: Humans crave social order. When people experience disorder and normlessnessâwhen they become exceedingly looseâthey desperately yearn for security. Autocratic leaders are there to pick up the cultural pieces and sate this universal need.
Call it cultureâs revenge, but tightness-looseness is a stubborn fact of our existence. As long as humans populate the Earth, the strength of social norms will be a key part of our cultural DNA. Part of this cultural code dictates that in response to extreme looseness, humans gravitate toward tightness, and vice versa. Understanding this link between tight-loose dynamics and geopolitical events will allow us to not only better anticipate global trends, but also develop culturally intelligent policies to manage them.
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