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Cultural Conflict

Title

Cultural Conflict

Author

Mullins, Ian

Research Area

Culture

Topic

Culture and Society

Abstract

This essay traces the emergence of the concept of cultural conflict as it is commonly used today in the social sciences. I describe the history of social scientific approaches to cultural conflict as they developed from the post‐World War II period through the 1980s; emphasizing how changes in the ways scholars conceptualize culture correspond to changes in how conflict is investigated. I argue that a pendulum‐like swing has occurred between, what I refer to as, inequality‐based approaches and value‐based approaches to the study of conflict. Researchers deploying inequality‐based approaches tend to focus on how inherent antagonisms within political, economic, and religious institutions, to name a few, lead people into contentious relations with others. In these accounts, culture is viewed as a by‐product of a group's position within a particular institution, and as such, is considered to reflect members' collective interests (or institutionally produced needs). Value‐based approaches, on the other hand, are characterized by the researcher's attention to fundamental differences in what people believe, and how these beliefs lead to contentious relations between various groups, nations, or even civilizations. In these approaches, culture is seen as enduring sets of schemas, or value systems, that direct action. This essay then turns to the debate over particular value‐based approaches to cultural conflict that emerged in the 1990s and presents emerging alternatives to these approaches. I conclude by presenting work that represent the current state of scholarship on cultural conflict and discuss how increased cross‐disciplinary collaborations contribute to our ability to advance social science research and develop new understandings of how culture relates to conflict.