全球社会与行为科学
Global Society and Behavioral Sciences
Aim
Global Society and Behavioral Sciences is a peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary journal dedicated to advancing the study, application, and integration of social sciences and behavioral sciences in the context of globalization. As globalization reshapes human interactions, cultural dynamics, and soc...
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- Scopes
- The journal covers interdisciplinary research at the intersection of global society and human behavior, including but not limited to the following areas:
- 1. Globalization and Behavioral Dynamics
- The impact of globalization on individual values, identity formation, and behavioral choices (e.g., global citizenship, transnational cultural identity, and consumer behavior in global markets).
- Behavioral changes driven by global events (e.g., pandemics, technological revolutions, and economic crises) and their implications for global social systems.
- Cross-cultural differences and commonalities in social norms, moral judgments, and prosocial behavior (e.g., cooperation, altruism, and fairness perception across cultures).
- 2. Cross-Cultural Interaction and Social Integration
- Immigrant and refugee adaptation behavior (e.g., cultural integration, language acquisition, employment choices, and identity reconstruction in host countries).
- Cross-cultural communication and conflict resolution (e.g., behavioral barriers to intercultural communication, strategies for reducing cultural conflict, and intercultural collaboration in global teams).
- The role of social networks in facilitating transnational social integration (e.g., virtual social networks for immigrant communities, global professional networks, and cross-border family ties).
- 3. Global Public Issues and Behavioral Intervention
- Public health behavior in global contexts (e.g., vaccine acceptance, health-seeking behavior, and adherence to global public health guidelines across cultures).
- Environmental behavior and sustainable development (e.g., individual and collective action for climate change mitigation, cross-national differences in pro-environmental behavior, and global environmental education strategies).
- Social justice and equitable behavior (e.g., behavioral responses to global inequality, attitudes toward poverty alleviation, and support for global social justice initiatives).
- 4. Digital Technology and Global Behavioral Transformation
- The impact of digital technology on global behavior (e.g., social media use, information-seeking behavior, and cross-border digital communication patterns).
- Digital inequality and its behavioral consequences (e.g., the digital divide’s effect on educational behavior, employment opportunities, and access to global information).
- Ethical issues in digital global behavior (e.g., privacy concerns, misinformation spread, and algorithmic bias in cross-cultural digital platforms).
- 5. Global Policy and Behavioral Insights
- Behavioral insights for global policy design (e.g., using nudges to promote compliance with international agreements, behavioral strategies for global tax cooperation, and public engagement in global governance).
- The role of behavior in implementing global development goals (e.g., behavioral barriers to achieving the UN Sustainable Development Goals, strategies to enhance public participation in global development initiatives).
- Cross-national comparisons of policy-induced behavioral changes (e.g., how different countries’ policies influence public health behavior, environmental behavior, and social equity).
- 6. Research Methods in Global Society and Behavioral Sciences
- Advanced methods for global-scale behavioral research (e.g., cross-cultural experimental design, transnational longitudinal studies, big data analysis of global behavioral patterns, and comparative ethnography).
- Validation and adaptation of behavioral science theories in non-Western and diverse cultural contexts (e.g., testing Western behavioral economics theories in Asian, African, or Latin American cultures).
- Ethical considerations in global behavioral research (e.g., cultural sensitivity in data collection, informed consent in cross-cultural studies, and equitable benefit-sharing with research participants in developing countries).
