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You are here: Home / cat / How Cultural Conflicts Shaped Society During Covid-19: Lessons from Tight and Loose Cultures

How Cultural Conflicts Shaped Society During Covid-19: Lessons from Tight and Loose Cultures

Dated: January 23, 2026

Cultural conflicts became far more visible during the height of the Covid-19 pandemic, revealing deep differences in how societies respond to crisis. As lockdowns spread across the world, arguments erupted online over whether stay-at-home orders were excessive. In some places, protesters gathered at government buildings to demand freedom of movement, while inside homes, parents and teenagers clashed over similar issues of autonomy. These tensions were not merely political or generational; they reflected a long-standing cultural conflict between personal liberty and collective restraint.

The pandemic brought renewed attention to what University of Maryland professor Michele Gelfand describes as the divide between “tight” and “loose” cultures in her book Rule Makers, Rule Breakers: How Tight and Loose Cultures Wire Our World. This divide, which has existed for centuries, refers to how strongly societies enforce social norms. Covid-19 did not create these differences, but it magnified them, making cultural contrasts harder to ignore.

Every culture operates with shared expectations about acceptable behavior, from everyday actions like punctuality to critical decisions such as compliance with public health rules during emergencies. The strength of these norms varies widely. Research led by Gelfand shows that societies exposed to frequent threats—such as wars, pandemics, natural disasters, or chronic scarcity—tend to develop tighter cultures. Countries like China, Singapore, Malaysia, and Pakistan evolved strict rules and strong coordination as survival strategies, enabling rapid collective action, though sometimes at the cost of flexibility.

In contrast, societies that have historically faced fewer existential threats have been able to loosen their norms. Countries such as the United States, Spain, Brazil, and the Netherlands tend to value autonomy, creativity, and flexible rules. While these looser cultures often excel in innovation, they can struggle when swift coordination and widespread compliance are required. This difference became clear during Covid-19, as tighter cultures like Singapore and South Korea were generally more effective at slowing the virus’s spread, while looser cultures experienced fragmented responses and uneven outcomes.

Tight-loose dynamics are not limited to nations; they exist within states, organizations, neighborhoods, and families. When a serious threat emerges, even loose cultures can temporarily tighten. New York City, known for openness and diversity, quickly accepted strict measures when hospitals were at risk of being overwhelmed. Meanwhile, regions that felt less immediate danger, such as parts of Florida and Wisconsin, opted for looser approaches, keeping businesses and public spaces open.

These cultural tensions also surfaced within households. Older adults and individuals with health risks often adopted stricter behaviors, limiting outings and following safety measures closely. Younger and healthier family members were more likely to resist restrictions, believing the personal risk was minimal. As Gelfand notes, when groups with fundamentally different cultural mindsets collide, conflict is almost inevitable. Those favoring tight rules may see looser behavior as dangerous, while those valuing freedom may view strict measures as harmful to the economy and personal rights.

Understanding these dynamics offers a path toward reducing cultural misunderstandings in future crises. Creating space for empathy, as Gelfand emphasizes, can help ease intergroup hostility. When conflicts arise, it is useful to recognize where we and others fall on the tight-loose continuum and why. Personal history, health concerns, and lived experiences shape how individuals respond to threats. Listening without judgment and sharing concerns openly can make it easier to find compromises that balance safety with autonomy.

Research also suggests that storytelling and virtual interactions can reduce cultural conflict across borders. Studies involving participants from tight and loose cultures showed that reading about one another’s daily lives increased mutual understanding and positive perceptions. The broader lesson from the Covid-19 era is clear: by listening, engaging, and trying to understand different cultural perspectives, societies can navigate conflict more productively when the next global crisis emerges.

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