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Charles Harb

Researcher at American University of Beirut

Publications -  41
Citations -  2203

Charles Harb is an academic researcher from American University of Beirut. The author has contributed to research in topics: Context (language use) & Cultural group selection. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 36 publications receiving 1901 citations. Previous affiliations of Charles Harb include University of Sussex & American University.

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Culture-Level Dimensions of Social Axioms and Their Correlates across 41 Cultures

Michael Harris Bond, +68 more
TL;DR: Leung et al. as mentioned in this paper revealed a five-dimensional structure of social axioms across individuals from five cultural groups across 41 nations and revealed the culture level factor structure and its correlates across 41 cultures.
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Beyond the 'east-west' dichotomy: Global variation in cultural models of selfhood.

Vivian L. Vignoles, +71 more
TL;DR: A new 7-dimensional model of self-reported ways of being independent or interdependent is developed and validated across cultures and will allow future researchers to test more accurately the implications of cultural models of selfhood for psychological processes in diverse ecocultural contexts.
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Individualism-collectivism as Descriptive Norms Development of a Subjective Norm Approach to Culture Measurement

TL;DR: In this paper, a new instrument for measuring the descriptive norms related to individualism-collectivism (IC) is presented, which has good statistical properties with iden- tical structures at individual and cultural level, good reliabilities at the individual level, adequate agreement within cultures, and demonstrates first signs of convergent and discriminant validity.

How Distinctive Are Indigenous Ways of Achieving Influence? A Comparative Study of

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the cultural specificity of guanxi, wasta, and jeitinho, each of which has been identified as an indigenous process of informal influence.
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How Distinctive Are Indigenous Ways of Achieving Influence? A Comparative Study of Guanxi, Wasta, Jeitinho, and “Pulling Strings”

TL;DR: The authors investigated the cultural specificity of guanxi, wasta, and jeitinho, each of which has been identified as an indigenous process of informal influence, and found that each type of scenario was perceived as representative and typical in its culture of origin, each was also perceived as somewhat typical by respondents in additional locations.