How Rice Fights Pandemics: Nature-Crop-Human Interactions Shaped COVID-19 Outcomes.

COVID-19 culture norm tightness relational mobility rice farming

Journal

Personality & social psychology bulletin
ISSN: 1552-7433
Titre abrégé: Pers Soc Psychol Bull
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 7809042

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Nov 2023
Historique:
medline: 23 10 2023
pubmed: 21 7 2022
entrez: 20 7 2022
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Wealthy nations led health preparedness rankings in 2019, yet many poor nations controlled COVID-19 better. We argue that a history of rice farming explains why some societies did better. We outline how traditional rice farming led to tight social norms and low-mobility social networks. These social structures helped coordinate societies against COVID-19. Study 1 compares rice- and wheat-farming prefectures within China. Comparing within China allows for controlled comparisons of regions with the same national government, language family, and other potential confounds. Study 2 tests whether the findings generalize to cultures globally. The data show rice-farming nations have tighter social norms and less-mobile relationships, which predict better COVID outcomes. Rice-farming nations suffered just 3% of the COVID deaths of nonrice nations. These findings suggest that long-run cultural differences influence how rice societies-with over 50% of the world's population-controlled COVID-19. The culture was critical, yet the preparedness rankings mostly ignored it.

Identifiants

pubmed: 35856451
doi: 10.1177/01461672221107209
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

1567-1586

Auteurs

Thomas Talhelm (T)

University of Chicago, IL, USA.

Cheol-Sung Lee (CS)

University of Chicago, IL, USA.
Sogang University, Seoul, South Korea.

Alexander S English (AS)

Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China.

Shuang Wang (S)

Shanghai International Studies University, China.

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