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Factorial Structure of the Family Values Scale From a Multilevel-Multicultural Perspective
Authors:Barbara M. Byrne  Fons J. R. van de Vijver
Affiliation:1. School of Psychology, University of Ottawa, Canada;2. Department of Cross-Cultural Psychology, Tilburg University, The Netherlands;3. Economic and Management Sciences, North-West University, South Africa;4. School of Psychology, University of Queensland, Australia
Abstract:In cross-cultural research, there is a tendency for researchers to draw inferences at the country level based on individual-level data. Such action implicitly and often mistakenly assumes that both the measuring instrument and its underlying construct(s) are operating equivalently across both levels. Based on responses from 5,482 college students sampled from 27 countries, we took a structural equation modeling approach to addressing this issue of level equivalence. Purposes of the study were: (a) to validate the hypothesized two-factor structure of the Family Values Scale (FV Scale; Georgas, 1999) within a multilevel framework that took individual- and country-level information into account; (b) to test equivalence of the FV Scale across individual and country levels; and (c) to evaluate relations between the FV Scale and three possibly important covariates—gender at the individual level, and affluence and religion at the country level. Implications of findings and importance of multilevel equivalence in cross-cultural research are discussed.
Keywords:cross-cultural research  measurement/structural equivalence  multilevel modeling  structural equation modeling
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