‎curriculum vitae‎


partment of Psychology, Princeton University, 1988



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Universal and culturespecific aspects of human values. Department of Psychology, Princeton University, 1988.




  1. The crosscultural study of values. Shanghai Normal University, Shanghai, China, 1988.




  1. Convenor and presenter, Symposia on values. The International Congress of Psychology, Sydney, Australia, 1988, and The International Association of CrossCultural Psychology Congress, Newcastle, Australia, 1988.




  1. The nature, structure and measurement of human values. Conference on Value Orientations and Change. Warsaw, Poland, 1988.




  1. Individualism and collectivism as value orientations. Department of Psychology, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1988.




  1. Comparing values across cultures. IFDO/IASSIST Congress, Jerusalem, Israel, 1989.




  1. Political orientations and basic values in Poland. International Association of Political Psychology Congress, Tel Aviv, 1989.




  1. Conceptualizing and measuring values. International Conference on Values and Value Change, Speyer, West Germany, 1989.




  1. A universal content and structure for values. First Annual Meeting of the Association of Spanish and Portuguese Social Psychologists, Madrid, Spain, 1989.




  1. Value priorities and political orientations. Institute for Psychology, Hungarian Academy of Sciences and Budapest University, Budapest, Hungary, 1990.




  1. Predicting attitudes and beliefs from value priorities. EuropeanIsraeli Conference on Beliefs, Values and Attitudes, Mitzpe Ramon, Israel, 1990.




  1. Culture-level and individual-level dimensions of values. Individualism-Collectivism Workshop, Seoul, Korea, July 1990.




  1. Thoughts in response to cross-cultural applications and critiques. 10th International Association of Cross-Cultural Psychology Congress, Nara, Japan, July 1990.




  1. Theory and method for the cross-cultural study of values. 10th International Association of Cross-Cultural Psychology Congress, Nara, Japan, July 1990.




  1. The necessity for combining universal and indigenous approaches in cross-cultural research: An example from the study of values. 10th International Association of Cross-Cultural Psychology Congress, Nara, Japan, July 1990.




  1. Universal and culture-specific aspects of human values. XXIIth International Congress of Applied Psychology, Kyoto, Japan, July 1990.




  1. Social psychology and the cross-cultural study of values. 85th Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association, Washington, D.C., August, 1990.




  1. Universals in the content and structure of values. Distinguished Invited Address at the 20th Annual Meeting of the Society for Cross-Cultural Research, Puerto Rico, February, 1991.




  1. Perceived Intergroup Similarity and Aggression. International Society for Research on Aggression, European Congress, Jerusalem, Israel, June, 1991.




  1. Cross-cultural studies of values. International Association of Cross-Cultural Psychology Conference, Debrecen, Hungary, July, 1991.




  1. Differences in culture-level value priorities among 25 countries. Second European Congress of Psychology, Budapest, Hungary, July, 1991.




  1. Individualism-Collectivism research: A critique. Second European Congress of Psychology, Budapest, Hungary, July, 1991.




  1. Cross-cultural studies of values. Institute of Psychology of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague, Czechoslovakia, July, 1991.




  1. Studying human values. Institute of Psychology of the Slovak Academy of Sciences, Bratislava, Czechoslovakia, July, 1991.




  1. Values, culture and organizations. Department of Organizational Management and Behavior, SUNY Buffalo, USA, August 1991.




  1. Studying human values. Invited keynote address at the XII International Congress of Cross-Cultural Psychology, Liege, Belgium, July 1992.




  1. National differences in value profiles. International Congress of Psychology, Brussels, Belgium, July 1992.




  1. Value studies: Individual and cultural. Institute of Psychology, University of Venezuela, Caracas, Venezuela, June 1993.




  1. Comparing value priorities across nations. Invited address at the XXIV Congress of the Interamerican Society of Psychology, Santiago, Chile, July 1993.




  1. Cross-cultural studies of values: Theoretical and methodological considerations. Department of Psychology, University of Buenos Aires, Argentina, July 1993.




  1. Consequences of individual differences in value priorities. The Eighth Ontario Symposium on Personality and Social Psychology, London, Ontario, Canada, August 1993.




  1. Predicting attitudes and behavior from integrated structures of value priorities. University of Helsinki, Distinguished Professorship address, Helsinki, Finland, August 1993.




  1. Influences on national value priorities: Implications for Finland. Invited lecture to the Prime Minister's Task Force on the Future of Finland. Helsinki, Finland, September 1993.




  1. Explaining national differences in value priorities. Israel Psychological Association Congress. Ramat Gan, October, 1993.




  1. National differences in value priorities. Memorial to Professor Louis Guttman, Hebrew University. March, 1994.




  1. Values and behavior. Department of Psychology, Bar Ilan University, April, 1994.




  1. East and West: Clash of values? Keynote address. International Congress of Applied Psychology, Madrid, July 1994.




  1. Are there pan-cultural norms for individual differences in value priorities? International Congress of Applied Psychology, Madrid, July 1994.




  1. A theory of values applied to teachers in the Latin world. International Congress of Applied Psychology, Madrid, July 1994.




  1. Studies of human values. Workshop at the Twelfth International Conference of the International Association for Cross-Cultural Psychology, Pamplona, Spain, July 1994.




  1. Values, meanings and goals: Views of the world in different cultures. Master Lecture, 102nd Annual convention of The American Psychological Association, Los Angeles, August, 1994.




  1. Cultural differences across nations: A values perspective. WORC Symposium on Values and Work - A Comparative Perspective, Tilburg, the Netherlands, November 1994.




  1. Family size and values: Linking mechanisms and relations across nations. II Congreso Internacional Familia y Sociedad, Tenerife, Islas Canarias, Spain, December 1994.




  1. The unimportance of parental value transmission. II Congreso Internacional Familia y Sociedad, Tenerife, Islas Canarias, Spain, December 1994.




  1. Implications of cultural values for identity formation. II Congreso Internacional Familia y Sociedad, Tenerife, Islas Canarias, Spain, December 1994.




  1. Mutual influences of values and educational experience. Department of Educational Psychology, University of La Laguna, Tenerife, Spain, December 1994




  1. Values and well-being: Correlates of value priorities in East and West Germany and in Israel. 27th Congress of the German Sociological Association, Halle, Germany, April 1995 (Claudia Stromberg, Klaus Boehnke, and Shalom Schwartz).




  1. Fear of war and its relations to value orientations in Germany and Israel. Fourth International Symposium on the Contributions of Psychology to Peace, Capetown, South Africa, June 1995 (Klaus Boehnke and Shalom Schwartz).




  1. Temperature, culture, and political violence worldwide. Presidential address to the VIIIth annual conference of the International Association for Conflict Management, Elsinore, Denmark, June, 1995 (Evert van de Vliert, Shalom Schwartz, Sipke Huismans, Geert Hofstede, & S. Dann).




  1. Values in the West: A challenge to Individualism-Collectivism theory. University of Amsterdam, Department of Psychology, September, 1995.




  1. Value priorities: International norms. 25th Congress of the Israel Psychological Association, Beersheva, October, 1995.




  1. Impacts of life under communist party rule on values in Eastern Europe. University of Chemnitz-Zwickau, Department of Sociology, February, 1996.




  1. Universality and bias in the structure of psychological questionnaire data. XIII Congress of the International Association of Cross-Cultural Psychology, Montreal, August, 1996 (Johnny Fontaine & Shalom Schwartz)




  1. What we worry about depends on our values: Theory and empirical tests. XIII Congress of the International Association of Cross-Cultural Psychology, Montreal, August, 1996.




  1. Individual and cultural value dimensions: Statistical improvements yes, but conceptually as confused as ever! XIII Congress of the International Association of Cross-Cultural Psychology, Montreal, August, 1996.




  1. New dimensions of culture: East is not East, West is not West. XXVI International Congress of Psychology, Montreal, August 1996.




  1. Gender differences in values in 46 nations: Findings and explanations. XXVI International Congress of Psychology, Montreal, August 1996.




  1. When are universalism values particularistic? International Colloquium: Universalism vs. Particularism toward the 21st Century, Prague, April 1997.

78. Value priorities as sources of problems in interpersonal behavior. International Workshop on Values, Maale HaChamisha, January 1998.


79. Are there global human values? Yes but no. Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, February 1998.
80. Values: A window into national culture and social change. XIV Congress of the International Association of Cross-Cultural Psychology, Bellingham, Washington, August, 1998.
81. Individual values: Antecedents, consequences and societal measurement. XIV Congress of the International Association of Cross-Cultural Psychology, Bellingham, Washington, August, 1998.
82. Are families important value transmitters? XIV Congress of the International Association of Cross-Cultural Psychology, Bellingham, Washington, August, 1998.
83. Workshop: A new, simple method to measure values across cultures. XIV Congress of the International Association of Cross-Cultural Psychology, Bellingham, Washington, August, 1998.
84. Cultural values across the globe: Implications for societal functioning. Small Group Meeting on Societal Psychology, Warsaw-Konstancin, Poland, October, 1998.
85. Cultural diversity in Europe in global perspective: It depends how closely you look. Joint European Conference of the International Association of Cross-Cultural Psychology and the International Test Commission, Graz, Austria, July, 1999.
86. Workshop: Measuring values across cultures. Joint European Conference of the International Association of Cross-Cultural Psychology and the International Test Commission, Graz, Austria, July, 1999.
87. Cross-cultural differences in the structure of the Schwartz value questionnaire: Unreliability or cultural specificity? Joint European Conference of the International Association of Cross-Cultural Psychology and the International Test Commission, Graz, Austria, July, 1999. (J. R. Fontaine, Y. H.

Poortinga, & S.H. Schwartz).


88. Basic human values: Theory, measurement, and applications across cultures. ZUMA (Zentrum fuer Umfragen, Methoden and Analysen), Mannheim, Germany, February 2000.
89. A new look at the impact of national culture on organizations: Illustrative applications to role stress. 15th Annual convention of the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology,

New Orleans, LA. April 2000 (L. Sagiv, & S. H. Schwartz).


90. Valeurs et niveau d’education [Values and educational level]. Association pour la Diffusion de la Recherche Internationale en Psychologie Sociale 3ème Congrès International de Psychologie Sociale en Langue Française, Nanterre, France, September 2000 (Monique Wach & S. H. Schwartz).
91. Basic value priorities: Are they variations on a single world-wide theme? Keynote address at the Seventh Bi-Annual Conference of the International Society for the Study of Work and Organizational Values, Jerusalem, Israel, June 2000.
92. National culture and organizational behavior: A new approach. Seventh Bi-Annual Conference of the International Society for the Study of Work and Organizational Values, Jerusalem, Israel, June 2000 (L. Sagiv & S. H. Schwartz).
93. National value cultures: Do they underpin democracy or undermine it? XXVII International Congress of Psychology, Stockholm, Sweden, July 2000.
94. Hawks and doves: Do they differ in identification with the nation? XXVII International Congress of Psychology, Stockholm, Sweden, July 2000 (S. Roccas, L. Sagiv, & S. Schwartz).
95. Social structure, culture and national values. XXVII International Congress of Psychology, Stockholm, Sweden, July 2000.
96. Culture clash around the globe as a source of potential conflict. Invited address in the Dag Hammaskjold Memorial Seminar on Diplomacy and Psychology, XXVII International Congress of Psychology, Stockholm, Sweden, July 2000.
97. Stop the confusion: Conceptual and empirical differences between cultural and individual dimensions of values. XXVII International Congress of Psychology, Stockholm, Sweden, July 2000.
98. Cultural values and managerial decisions: A new look at national culture. XVth International Congress of the International Association for Cross-Culture Psychology, Pultusk, Poland, July 2000 (L. Sagiv & S. Schwartz).
99. Parents versus peers: Influences on adolescent value priorities. XVth International Congress of the International Association for Cross-Culture Psychology, Pultusk, Poland, July 2000.
100. Multimethod probes of basic human values. XVth International Congress of the International Association for Cross-Culture Psychology, Pultusk, Poland, July 2000 (S. Schwartz, S. Roccas, G. Melech, & A. Lehmann).
101. Value consensus and importance: A cross-national study. XVth International Congress of the International Association for Cross-Culture Psychology, Pultusk, Poland, July 2000 (S. Schwartz & G. Sagie).
102. Basic value priorities: Are they variations on a single world-wide theme? Colloquium at Bar Ilan University, January 2001.
103. Antecedents and consequences of national variation on three cultural dimensions. Keynote address at the International Conference Comparing Cultures: Dimensions of Culture in Comparative Perspective, Tilburg, The Netherlands, April 2001.
104. National culture and organizational behavior: A new approach. 2001 Academy of Management Conference, Washington, D.C., August 2001 (L. Sagiv & S. Schwartz).
105. Theory and measurement of values: A workshop. European Regional Meetings of the International Association of Cross-Cultural Psychology, Winchester, United Kingdom, July 2001.
106. Dimensions of culture and national differences in organizational stress. Federal University of Brasilia, Brasilia, August 2001.
107. Values: What, why, and how. Universidade Federal da Paraiba, Joao Pessoa, Brazil, August 2001.
108. Values: What, why, and how. Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, September 2001.
109. Values and behavior: Theory, methods, and empirical research. Escuela de Psicologia, Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile, Santiago, Chile, September 2001.
110. What we know about values. 3rd annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Savannah, Georgia, USA, January 2002.
111. The structure and content of personal values and their relations to behavior. Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin, Berlin, Germany, February 2002.
112. How can one approach the study of values? Conservatoire National des Arts et Metiers. Paris, France, May 2002.
113. Relations of culture to social structure, demography and policy in the study of nations. Invited address at the XXV International Congress of Applied Psychology, Singapore, July 2002.
114. Where is culture? XXV International Congress of Applied Psychology, Singapore, July 2002.
115. Basic human values: Nature, structure and applications in cross-cultural perspective. ‘La Sapienza’ University of Rome, Italy, November 2002.
116. Mapping cultural values around the world. Ben Gurion University, Israel, December 2002.
117. Values of Autonomy and Relatedness in Adolescence: A Study in 19 Cultures. A paper presented at the convention of the American Educational Research Association, Chicago, April 2003. (with Ariel Knafo).
118. Conceptualizing and measuring basic values. Meeting of the “Values in psychiatric diagnosis research methods working group.” London, July 2003.
119. What can we learn about ponds from studying ducks? Psychological and cultural dimensions. VII Regional Meeting of the International Association of Cross-Cultural Psychology, Budapest, Hungary, July 2003.
120. The European Social Survey: Introducing a new source of cross-national data. A Workshop at the VII Regional Meeting of the International Association of Cross-Cultural Psychology, Budapest, Hungary, July 2003.
121. Comparing national cultures: Implications for managerial decision-making. Department of Psychology, University of Helsinki, Finland, September 2003.
122. The state of the art in values research. Department of Social Psychology, University of Helsinki, Finland, September 2003.
123. Meeting of cultures: Implications for international conflict and problem solving. Social Sciences Faculty, University of Helsinki, Finland, September 2003.
124. Values in Europe. Invited address at the European Social Survey Launch Conference: Measuring attitudes and values in Europe, Brussels, Belgium, November 2003.
125. Mapping and understanding cultural differences in the world. Keynote address at the Middle East and North Africa Regional Conference of Psychology, Dubai, UAE, December 2003.
126. Value priorities and structure in Europe and Israel. Conference in Memory of Prof. Avi Sagie, Bar Ilan University, May 2004.
127. Studying basic values: Recent theoretical developments, methodological advances, and findings. Keynote address at the XVIIth International Congress of the International Association for Cross-Cultural Psychology, Xian, China, August 2004.


  1. Values in Europe: A Multiple Group Comparison with 20 Countries Using the European Social Survey 2003. RC33 Sixth International Conference on Social Science Methodology, Amsterdam, August 2004. (with Eldad Davidov & Peter Schmidt).




  1. Mapping and interpreting cultural value orientations around the world. Istanbul Bilgi University, Turkey, October 2004.




  1. Studying basic values: Recent theoretical developments, methodological advances, and findings. ‘La Sapienza’ University of Rome, October 2004.




  1. Understanding differences in national value cultures. International University of Bremen, Germany, May 2005.




  1. Basic values: What they are and why they matter. University of Osnabrueck, Germany, May 2005.




  1. Cultural value orientations: A tool to compare countries and understand differences. Keynote address at the 30th Congress of the Interamerican Society of Psychology, Buenos Aires, Argentina, June 2005.




  1. What determines willingness to accept immigrants into one’s country? In symposium on Values and Immigration, VII IACCP Regional Congress, San Sebastián, Spain, July, 2005.




  1. Sex differences in value priorities: cross-cultural and multi-method studies. In symposium on Recent Advances in the Study of Values, VII IACCP Regional Congress, San Sebastián, Spain, July, 2005. (with Tammy Rubel)




  1. The structure and implications of individuals’ value systems. Keynote address at the 1st European Association for Survey Research Conference, Barcelona, Spain, July 2005.




  1. Bringing values back in: A multiple group comparison with 20 countries using the european social survey 2003. In symposium on Measuring Basic Human Values, 1st European Association for Survey Research Conference, Barcelona, Spain, July 2005. (with Eldad Davidov and Peter Schmidt).




  1. Structural equivalence of the values domain across cultures: Separating sampling fluctuations from systematic, meaningful variation. In symposium on Measuring Basic Human Values, 1st European Association for Survey Research Conference, Barcelona, Spain, July 2005. (with Johnny R. J. Fontaine, Ype H. Poortinga, and Luc Delbeke).




  1. What determines willingness to accept immigrants in West Europe, with special attention to Italy? ‘La Sapienza’ University of Rome, October 2005.




  1. The value of values. Keynote address at the International Congress for the Study of Sources and Development of Pro-social and Anti-social Motivation, Catania, Italy, October 2005.




  1. Value dimensions of culture and national difference. In symposium on cross-cultural psychology at the Asian Applied Psychology International—Regional Conference, Bangkok, Thailand, November 2005.

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