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Living Dangerously: Culture of Honor, Risk-Taking, and the Nonrandomness of "Accidental'' Deaths
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Living Dangerously: Culture of Honor, Risk-Taking, and the Nonrandomness of "Accidental'' Deaths

Collin D Barnes, Ryan P Brown and Michael Tamborski
Social psychological & personality science, Vol.3(1), pp.100-107
01/01/2012

Abstract

Psychology Psychology, Social Social Sciences
Two studies examined the hypothesis that the culture of honor would be associated with heightened risk taking, presumably because risky behaviors provide social proof of strength and fearlessness. As hypothesized, Study 1 showed that honor states in the United States exhibited higher rates of accidental deaths among Whites (but not non-Whites) than did nonhonor states, particularly in nonmetropolitan areas. Elevated accidental deaths in honor states appeared for both men and women and remained when the authors controlled for a host of statewide covariates (e. g., economic deprivation, cancer deaths, temperature) and for non-White deaths. Study 2, likewise, showed that people who endorsed honor-related beliefs reported greater risk taking tendencies, independent of age, sex, self-esteem, and the big five.

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