While the influence of culture on coping has been implicated conceptually in the stress-coping literature for sometime, empirical research on cross-cultural coping has gained momentum only recently. The past two decades witnessed a significant growth in the research and the knowledge base of culture and coping, as well as an increased call by scholars for more culturally and contextually informed stress-coping paradigms. In view of this critical development, the present article intends to systematically review and take stock of the theoretical and empirical knowledge that has emerged from the cumulative cultural coping research. Specifically, this corpus of literature was summarized and analyzed in terms of (a) theoretical propositions, (b)...
Although there is much evidence that cultural groups differ in emotion regulation (e.g., emotion sup...
This study examines differences in the independent and interdependent self-construals of American an...
Although literature suggests that international students are more likely to experience high levels o...
While culture’s effect on the coping process has long been acknowledged in the stress-coping literat...
A burgeoning body of cultural coping research has begun to identify the prevalence and the functiona...
Three studies establish the relations between cultural values and coping using multicultural samples...
This study explored coping as a cultural adaptation by studying the role of ethnicity and acculturat...
Despite the prevalence and popularity of research on positive and negative affect within the field o...
The Cross-Cultural Coping Scale, a scenario-based instrument, was developed in 3 studies. Explorator...
The purpose of the present study was to examine the influence of cultural factors, such as self-con...
Received 29 August 2017. Accepted 25 October 2017. Published online 18 December 2017.This paper disc...
This research study aims at examining the cross-cultural differences or similarities in the stress c...
The paper presents a new psychometric adaptation of the cross-cultural coping scale for the Russian-...
Given the continuous, dynamic demographic changes internationally due to intensive worldwide migrati...
The aim of the study was to compare cultures of various levels of individualism and collectivism wit...
Although there is much evidence that cultural groups differ in emotion regulation (e.g., emotion sup...
This study examines differences in the independent and interdependent self-construals of American an...
Although literature suggests that international students are more likely to experience high levels o...
While culture’s effect on the coping process has long been acknowledged in the stress-coping literat...
A burgeoning body of cultural coping research has begun to identify the prevalence and the functiona...
Three studies establish the relations between cultural values and coping using multicultural samples...
This study explored coping as a cultural adaptation by studying the role of ethnicity and acculturat...
Despite the prevalence and popularity of research on positive and negative affect within the field o...
The Cross-Cultural Coping Scale, a scenario-based instrument, was developed in 3 studies. Explorator...
The purpose of the present study was to examine the influence of cultural factors, such as self-con...
Received 29 August 2017. Accepted 25 October 2017. Published online 18 December 2017.This paper disc...
This research study aims at examining the cross-cultural differences or similarities in the stress c...
The paper presents a new psychometric adaptation of the cross-cultural coping scale for the Russian-...
Given the continuous, dynamic demographic changes internationally due to intensive worldwide migrati...
The aim of the study was to compare cultures of various levels of individualism and collectivism wit...
Although there is much evidence that cultural groups differ in emotion regulation (e.g., emotion sup...
This study examines differences in the independent and interdependent self-construals of American an...
Although literature suggests that international students are more likely to experience high levels o...