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Using thematic analysis to explore symbolism in transport choice across national cultures

Using thematic analysis to explore symbolism in transport choice across national cultures
Using thematic analysis to explore symbolism in transport choice across national cultures
Symbolism, what people believe a transport mode tells others about them within the context of a hierarchical society, has been shown to be a significant driver of transport choice. However, despite the common practice of transferring transport policies between nations, no research has focused on how a mode’s symbolic connotations vary across national cultures and how this may affect individual and group transport choices. This paper describes research which utilised two aspects of the Hofstede cross-cultural indices—power differential, and individualism versus collectivism—to develop and strengthen theory through qualitative deductive thematic analysis. Forty-eight interviewees from four Hofstede cultural clusters were sampled horizontally, across equivalent income, occupational and educational levels, to attempt to lessen socio-demographic distortions. Semi-structured interviews were then undertaken. Interview transcripts were analysed manually using previously derived symbolic transport thematic codes. The significant differences between the Hofstede groups in both the density of thematic coding, and the quotes offered, suggest symbolism may strongly influence the potential outcomes of transport policies transferred between nations possessing significantly different cultural attributes and imperatives. Given this the authors believe there is sound justification for further deductive and inductive analysis on the existing dataset, and the extension of the theory to a broader population within each cultural cluster.
0049-4488
Ashmore, David P.
414351fb-6bb8-4836-ba51-c6271c39b932
Thoreau, Roselle
9f999388-4e74-4ce7-b2f1-e21d3d9bf760
Kwami, Corina
12855b2d-d816-4554-90a7-a7f6020572fa
Christie, Nicola
3e307425-04dd-4a19-a5bf-d45269733280
Tyler, Nicholas A.
02fc5ca3-5ceb-4c4e-8626-8411029ac456
Ashmore, David P.
414351fb-6bb8-4836-ba51-c6271c39b932
Thoreau, Roselle
9f999388-4e74-4ce7-b2f1-e21d3d9bf760
Kwami, Corina
12855b2d-d816-4554-90a7-a7f6020572fa
Christie, Nicola
3e307425-04dd-4a19-a5bf-d45269733280
Tyler, Nicholas A.
02fc5ca3-5ceb-4c4e-8626-8411029ac456

Ashmore, David P., Thoreau, Roselle, Kwami, Corina, Christie, Nicola and Tyler, Nicholas A. (2018) Using thematic analysis to explore symbolism in transport choice across national cultures. Transportation, 47. (doi:10.1007/s11116-018-9902-7).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Symbolism, what people believe a transport mode tells others about them within the context of a hierarchical society, has been shown to be a significant driver of transport choice. However, despite the common practice of transferring transport policies between nations, no research has focused on how a mode’s symbolic connotations vary across national cultures and how this may affect individual and group transport choices. This paper describes research which utilised two aspects of the Hofstede cross-cultural indices—power differential, and individualism versus collectivism—to develop and strengthen theory through qualitative deductive thematic analysis. Forty-eight interviewees from four Hofstede cultural clusters were sampled horizontally, across equivalent income, occupational and educational levels, to attempt to lessen socio-demographic distortions. Semi-structured interviews were then undertaken. Interview transcripts were analysed manually using previously derived symbolic transport thematic codes. The significant differences between the Hofstede groups in both the density of thematic coding, and the quotes offered, suggest symbolism may strongly influence the potential outcomes of transport policies transferred between nations possessing significantly different cultural attributes and imperatives. Given this the authors believe there is sound justification for further deductive and inductive analysis on the existing dataset, and the extension of the theory to a broader population within each cultural cluster.

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More information

Published date: 28 June 2018

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 492834
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/492834
ISSN: 0049-4488
PURE UUID: d1b628a3-61d1-46ca-b4dd-1bf1ba615e69
ORCID for David P. Ashmore: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1649-1962

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Date deposited: 15 Aug 2024 16:54
Last modified: 16 Aug 2024 02:12

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Contributors

Author: David P. Ashmore ORCID iD
Author: Roselle Thoreau
Author: Corina Kwami
Author: Nicola Christie
Author: Nicholas A. Tyler

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