Cross-Cultural Research
Cross-Cultural Research, formerly Behavior Science Research, is sponsored by the Human Relations Area Files, Inc. (HRAF). For over three decades, Cross-Cultural Research has made unique contributions to cross-cultural scholarship. In the 1990s CCR expanded its editorial focus to include peer-reviewed articles that describe cross-cultural and comparative studies in all human sciences.
Each issue of Cross-Cultural Research, published quarterly, focuses on research that systematically tests theories about human society and behavior across a range of societies, cultures, and nations. Worldwide cross-cultural studies are particularly welcomed. Theoretical and methodological articles are occasionally considered if they provide ground-breaking approaches to cross-cultural research in the future.
Interdisciplinary
With Cross-Cultural Research you have access to cross-cultural and comparative research by scholars from a variety of disciplines, including: Anthropology • Archaeology • Evolutionary Biology • Family Studies • Human Ecology • Political Science • Psychology • Sociology • Economics •
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Cross-Cultural Research, formerly Behavior Science Research, is sponsored by the Human Relations Area Files, Inc. (HRAF). The mission of the journal is to publish peer-reviewed articles describing cross-cultural or comparative studies in all the social/behavioral sciences and other sciences dealing with humans, including anthropology, sociology, psychology, political science, economics, human ecology, and evolutionary biology. Worldwide cross-cultural studies are particularly welcomed, but all kinds of systematic comparisons are acceptable so long as they deal explicitly with cross-cultural issues pertaining to the constraints and variables of human behavior. Studies that deal with measured differences between or among cultures (or subjects therefrom) must link them to other measured differences between or among the cultures. In other words, the study must do more than just compare two or more cultures (or people from them). The dependent variable(s) must be linked statistically (or casually, at least by argument) to one or more independent variable(s) that have been measured. The journal has this requirement because an observed difference could be the result of any other difference(s) between or among the cultures compared. The study should present evidence that narrows down the casual possibilities with regard to the dependent variable(s). The possibly explanatory variables may be cultural, geographic, historical, etc. Measures could be based on ethnography, individual testing, behavior observations, etc.
Carol R. Ember | Human Relations Area Files, New Haven, USA |
Herbert Barry, III | Psychology, University of Pittsburgh, USA |
Deborah L. Best | Wake Forest University, USA |
Michael Burton | Anthropology, University of California, Irvine, USA |
Garry Chick | Pennsylvania State University, USA |
Stephen Chrisomalis | Wayne State University, USA |
David E. Cournoyer | Social Work, University of Connecticut, USA |
Gary M. Feinman | Anthropology, Field Museum, Chicago, Illinois, USA |
Lewellyn Hendrix | Sociology, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, USA |
Bobbi Low | Evolutionary Biology, University of Michigan, USA |
Carmella C. Moore | Cognitive Sciences, University of California, Irvine, USA |
Robert L. Munroe | Anthropology, Pitzer College, USA |
Peter N. Peregrine | Anthropology, Lawrence University, USA |
Douglas Raybeck | Anthropology, Hamilton College, USA |
Marc H. Ross | Political Science, Bryn Mawr College, USA |
Bruce Russett | USA |
Alice Schlegel | University of Arizona, Department of Anthropology, Tuscon, USA |
Robert W. Schrauf | Applied Linguistics, Pennsylvania State University, USA |
Marshall Segall | Psychology, Syracuse University, USA |
Melvin Ember | HRAF, USA |
Manuscript submission guidelines can be accessed on Sage Journals.