{"title":"Feeling of Insecurity and Hope in the Future: Case Study of Tehran","authors":"Adel Abdollahi","doi":"10.1080/19436149.2023.2266868","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"AbstractIn recent decades, Iranian society has experienced rapid socio-economic changes that seriously affect feelings of hope in the future (HF) among social groups, especially in metropolitan areas such as Tehran. This study on HF, which I conducted in 2019, provides a gender analysis of HF for Tehran residents based on selected demographic variables and indicators of socio-economic and psychological insecurities. It also analyzes organizational and public trust by applying the Classification and Regression Trees (CART). I selected the participants from different areas of Tehran: 590 men and 610 women out of a population of 4,839,249 (3,054,715 men and 1,784,534 women) using two-stage stratified sampling with Probability Proportional to Size (PPS), and I completed with them structured questionnaires. The results showed that HF of Tehran residents is correlated with their gender (P-value = 0.033). Thus, two distinct trees with over 60% accuracies were fitted. Three influential variables on men’s HF were age, socio-economic insecurity, and public trust. Young men had higher HF than older ones.Key Words: Classification and regression trees (CART)Hope in the future (HF)Psychological insecuritysocio-economic insecurityTehran AcknowledgmentsI am immensely grateful to Professor Mostafa Azkia (Tehran University), who invited me to participate in this special issue, which is in honour of his 40+ plus years of promoting sociological research in Iran. I also would like to express my gratitude to Professor Eric Hooglund (Editor of Middle East Critique) for sharing his pearls of wisdom with me during the editing of this article. I thank my colleagues, Dr. Arezoo Bagheri and Dr. Mahsa Saadati at the National Institute for Population Research in Tehran, each of whom provided insight and expertise that were of great assistance in the research, and especially for their statistical assistance, although they may not agree with all the interpretations/conclusions in this article. In addition, I thank all the anonymous reviewers for their insights.Disclosure StatementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 Ann K.S. Lambton (Citation2000) Theory of government in Iran, trans. into Perian by Ch. Pahlavan (Tehran: Giv).2 Homa Katouzian (Citation2004) The short-term society: A study in the problems of long-term political and economic development in Iran. In: Middle Eastern Studies, 40, 1, p. 1.3 For instance, the average Iranian life expectancy increased for the whole country in both rural and urban areas from 58.9, 62.6, and 55.4 years in 1976 to 75.06, 74.2, 73.2 years in 2016, respectively (Statistical Centre of Iran, Citation1976; Citation2016).4 Ali Asadi. (Citation1977) Cultural Trends and Social Attitudes in Iran, Tehran: Research Institute of Communication Sciences and Development of Iran; and Mohsen Goodarzi (2004) Values and attitudes of Iranians (Tehran:5 Gholam Reza Ghaffari, “Measuring the social capital (second wave),” p. 153.6 Fazeli (Citation2017) Social hope in Iran from the period of Mashrutyat to present (the past is not our reference). In: The Journal of Morvarid, 6 (7), pp.13-20; available online at: https://rahman.org.ir; accessed: 12 Jane 2020; and Ferasatkhah (Citation2017) Iranian people are hopeful but without social hope, in: ibid.7 Djavad Salehi-Isfahani, D. (Citation2017) Poverty and income inequality in the Islamic Republic of Iran. In: Revue internationale des études du développement [International review of development studies] (1), pp. 113-136.8 George Ritzer (Citation1975) Sociology: A Multiple Paradigm Science. In: The American Sociologist, 10 (3), pp. 156–167. Available online at: http://www.jstor.org/stable/27702185, accessed: 14 January 2023.9 George Herbert Mead (Citation2012) Symbolic interactionism: A First Look at Communication Theory, pp. 54-66 (New York: McGraw-Hill). US scholar George Mead (1863-1931) generally is considered the father of modern sociology, and his major texts continue to be published and studied in major universities world-wide.10 Herbert Blumer (Citation1980) Mead and Blumer: The convergent methodological perspectives of social behaviorism and symbolic interactionism. In: American Sociological Review, pp. 409-419. doi.10.2307/2095174; and Mead, Symbolic Interactionism, pp. 54-66.11 Mead, ibid.12 Mead, ibid.13 R. Snyder (Citation1994) The psychology of hope: You can get there from here (London: Simon and Schuster).14 A. Schwandt (Citation1994) Constructivist, interpretivist approaches to human inquiry. In N. K. Denzin & Y. S. Lincoln (eds.), Handbook of Qualitative research, pp. 118–137 (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications); and Herbert Blumer, ‘Mead and Blumer.’15 Afshani & Jaefari (Citation2016) The relationship between social capital and hope in the future among students in Yazd University. In: Journal of Social Sciences, 23(73), pp. 93-116. doi: 10.22054/qjss.2016.7205; and Safarishali & Tavafi (Citation2018) ‘Assessing Hope for the Future.’16 Anthony Giddens (Citation2014) Structuration theory: Past, present and future. In: Anthony Giddens, Theory of structuration, pp. 201-221 (London: Routledge).17 Ibid.18 Ibid.19 Adel Abdollahi (Citation2019) Socio-economic and Demographic Factors Affecting on Hope in the Future in Tehran (Tehran: National Institute for Population Research [NIPR]).20 Rafieian and Shali (Citation2013) The spatial analysis of Tehran’s development level based on metropolitan areas. In: Journal of Spatial Planning, pp. 16(4), pp. 25-48.21 A Cronbach’s Alpha coefficient measures the internal consistency, or reliability, of a set of survey items.22 G.S. Linoff, and M.J.A. Berry (Citation2002) Mining the Web: Transforming Customer Data into Customer Value (New York: John Wiley & Sons).23 L. Nanni, A. Lumini & C. Manna. (Citation2011) A Data Mining Approach for Predicting the Pregnancy Rate in Human Assisted Reproduction. In: Advanced Computational Intelligence Paradigms in Healthcare, 326, 5, pp. 97-111. (Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer).24 D.L. Olson & D. Delen (Citation2008) Advanced Data Mining Techniques (Berlin & Heidelberg: Springer).25 M. Sleat (Citation2013) Hope and disappointment in politics. In: Contemporary Politics, 19(2), pp. 131-145. Available online at: https://www.tandfonline.com. Accessed: 24 January 2023. doi.org/10.1080/13569775.2013.785826.26 P. Piran (Citation2004) The role of disasters sociology in crisis management. In: Journal of social welfare, 3 (11), pp. 13-48. Available online at: http://refahj.uswr.ac.ir/article-1-2196-fa.html. Accessed: 13 January 2023.27 N. Fazeli (Citation2018) Fear and modernity; Formulation of the problem of fear and insecurity in contemporary Iran. In: Journal of Socio-Cultural Strategy, 7(3), pp. 7-44. doi .20.0.1001.1.22517081.1397.7.3.1.428 D. Divjak (Citation2019) Predicting: Using Past Experience to Guide Future Action. In Frequency in Language: Memory, Attention and Learning, pp. 205-232 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press); and G.29 Pew Research Centre (2019) America in 2050. Available online at: https://www.pewresearch.org/social-trends/2019/03/21/america-in-2050/. Accessed: 18 January 2023.30 M. Hill, J. Vail & J. Wheelock (Citation2005) Insecure Times: Living with Insecurity in Modern Society (London: Routledge); and Erlinghagen (Citation2007) Self-perceived Job Insecurity and Social Context:31 Einarsdóttir, Hansla & Johansson (Citation2019) Looking back in order to predict the future, Nordic Psychology, 71(1), pp.17-38. doi: 10.1080/19012276.2018.1457452.32 Robert D. Putnam (Citation2015) Bowling alone: America’s declining social capital. In: The City Reader, pp. 188-196 (London: Routledge); and J.S. Coleman (Citation1988) ‘Social Capital in the Creation of Human Capital, in American Journal of Sociology, 94, pp, 95-120; available online at:33 http://www.jstor.org/stable/2780243. Accessed: 24 January 2023.Additional informationFundingThis study was based on a survey, ‘Socio-economic and Demographic Factors Affecting on Hope in the Future in Tehran’ which was supported by the National Institute for Population Research in 2019 with the registered numbers of 20/15283.","PeriodicalId":44822,"journal":{"name":"Middle East Critique","volume":"2 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.8000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-20","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Middle East Critique","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/19436149.2023.2266868","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"AREA STUDIES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
AbstractIn recent decades, Iranian society has experienced rapid socio-economic changes that seriously affect feelings of hope in the future (HF) among social groups, especially in metropolitan areas such as Tehran. This study on HF, which I conducted in 2019, provides a gender analysis of HF for Tehran residents based on selected demographic variables and indicators of socio-economic and psychological insecurities. It also analyzes organizational and public trust by applying the Classification and Regression Trees (CART). I selected the participants from different areas of Tehran: 590 men and 610 women out of a population of 4,839,249 (3,054,715 men and 1,784,534 women) using two-stage stratified sampling with Probability Proportional to Size (PPS), and I completed with them structured questionnaires. The results showed that HF of Tehran residents is correlated with their gender (P-value = 0.033). Thus, two distinct trees with over 60% accuracies were fitted. Three influential variables on men’s HF were age, socio-economic insecurity, and public trust. Young men had higher HF than older ones.Key Words: Classification and regression trees (CART)Hope in the future (HF)Psychological insecuritysocio-economic insecurityTehran AcknowledgmentsI am immensely grateful to Professor Mostafa Azkia (Tehran University), who invited me to participate in this special issue, which is in honour of his 40+ plus years of promoting sociological research in Iran. I also would like to express my gratitude to Professor Eric Hooglund (Editor of Middle East Critique) for sharing his pearls of wisdom with me during the editing of this article. I thank my colleagues, Dr. Arezoo Bagheri and Dr. Mahsa Saadati at the National Institute for Population Research in Tehran, each of whom provided insight and expertise that were of great assistance in the research, and especially for their statistical assistance, although they may not agree with all the interpretations/conclusions in this article. In addition, I thank all the anonymous reviewers for their insights.Disclosure StatementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 Ann K.S. Lambton (Citation2000) Theory of government in Iran, trans. into Perian by Ch. Pahlavan (Tehran: Giv).2 Homa Katouzian (Citation2004) The short-term society: A study in the problems of long-term political and economic development in Iran. In: Middle Eastern Studies, 40, 1, p. 1.3 For instance, the average Iranian life expectancy increased for the whole country in both rural and urban areas from 58.9, 62.6, and 55.4 years in 1976 to 75.06, 74.2, 73.2 years in 2016, respectively (Statistical Centre of Iran, Citation1976; Citation2016).4 Ali Asadi. (Citation1977) Cultural Trends and Social Attitudes in Iran, Tehran: Research Institute of Communication Sciences and Development of Iran; and Mohsen Goodarzi (2004) Values and attitudes of Iranians (Tehran:5 Gholam Reza Ghaffari, “Measuring the social capital (second wave),” p. 153.6 Fazeli (Citation2017) Social hope in Iran from the period of Mashrutyat to present (the past is not our reference). In: The Journal of Morvarid, 6 (7), pp.13-20; available online at: https://rahman.org.ir; accessed: 12 Jane 2020; and Ferasatkhah (Citation2017) Iranian people are hopeful but without social hope, in: ibid.7 Djavad Salehi-Isfahani, D. (Citation2017) Poverty and income inequality in the Islamic Republic of Iran. In: Revue internationale des études du développement [International review of development studies] (1), pp. 113-136.8 George Ritzer (Citation1975) Sociology: A Multiple Paradigm Science. In: The American Sociologist, 10 (3), pp. 156–167. Available online at: http://www.jstor.org/stable/27702185, accessed: 14 January 2023.9 George Herbert Mead (Citation2012) Symbolic interactionism: A First Look at Communication Theory, pp. 54-66 (New York: McGraw-Hill). US scholar George Mead (1863-1931) generally is considered the father of modern sociology, and his major texts continue to be published and studied in major universities world-wide.10 Herbert Blumer (Citation1980) Mead and Blumer: The convergent methodological perspectives of social behaviorism and symbolic interactionism. In: American Sociological Review, pp. 409-419. doi.10.2307/2095174; and Mead, Symbolic Interactionism, pp. 54-66.11 Mead, ibid.12 Mead, ibid.13 R. Snyder (Citation1994) The psychology of hope: You can get there from here (London: Simon and Schuster).14 A. Schwandt (Citation1994) Constructivist, interpretivist approaches to human inquiry. In N. K. Denzin & Y. S. Lincoln (eds.), Handbook of Qualitative research, pp. 118–137 (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications); and Herbert Blumer, ‘Mead and Blumer.’15 Afshani & Jaefari (Citation2016) The relationship between social capital and hope in the future among students in Yazd University. In: Journal of Social Sciences, 23(73), pp. 93-116. doi: 10.22054/qjss.2016.7205; and Safarishali & Tavafi (Citation2018) ‘Assessing Hope for the Future.’16 Anthony Giddens (Citation2014) Structuration theory: Past, present and future. In: Anthony Giddens, Theory of structuration, pp. 201-221 (London: Routledge).17 Ibid.18 Ibid.19 Adel Abdollahi (Citation2019) Socio-economic and Demographic Factors Affecting on Hope in the Future in Tehran (Tehran: National Institute for Population Research [NIPR]).20 Rafieian and Shali (Citation2013) The spatial analysis of Tehran’s development level based on metropolitan areas. In: Journal of Spatial Planning, pp. 16(4), pp. 25-48.21 A Cronbach’s Alpha coefficient measures the internal consistency, or reliability, of a set of survey items.22 G.S. Linoff, and M.J.A. Berry (Citation2002) Mining the Web: Transforming Customer Data into Customer Value (New York: John Wiley & Sons).23 L. Nanni, A. Lumini & C. Manna. (Citation2011) A Data Mining Approach for Predicting the Pregnancy Rate in Human Assisted Reproduction. In: Advanced Computational Intelligence Paradigms in Healthcare, 326, 5, pp. 97-111. (Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer).24 D.L. Olson & D. Delen (Citation2008) Advanced Data Mining Techniques (Berlin & Heidelberg: Springer).25 M. Sleat (Citation2013) Hope and disappointment in politics. In: Contemporary Politics, 19(2), pp. 131-145. Available online at: https://www.tandfonline.com. Accessed: 24 January 2023. doi.org/10.1080/13569775.2013.785826.26 P. Piran (Citation2004) The role of disasters sociology in crisis management. In: Journal of social welfare, 3 (11), pp. 13-48. Available online at: http://refahj.uswr.ac.ir/article-1-2196-fa.html. Accessed: 13 January 2023.27 N. Fazeli (Citation2018) Fear and modernity; Formulation of the problem of fear and insecurity in contemporary Iran. In: Journal of Socio-Cultural Strategy, 7(3), pp. 7-44. doi .20.0.1001.1.22517081.1397.7.3.1.428 D. Divjak (Citation2019) Predicting: Using Past Experience to Guide Future Action. In Frequency in Language: Memory, Attention and Learning, pp. 205-232 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press); and G.29 Pew Research Centre (2019) America in 2050. Available online at: https://www.pewresearch.org/social-trends/2019/03/21/america-in-2050/. Accessed: 18 January 2023.30 M. Hill, J. Vail & J. Wheelock (Citation2005) Insecure Times: Living with Insecurity in Modern Society (London: Routledge); and Erlinghagen (Citation2007) Self-perceived Job Insecurity and Social Context:31 Einarsdóttir, Hansla & Johansson (Citation2019) Looking back in order to predict the future, Nordic Psychology, 71(1), pp.17-38. doi: 10.1080/19012276.2018.1457452.32 Robert D. Putnam (Citation2015) Bowling alone: America’s declining social capital. In: The City Reader, pp. 188-196 (London: Routledge); and J.S. Coleman (Citation1988) ‘Social Capital in the Creation of Human Capital, in American Journal of Sociology, 94, pp, 95-120; available online at:33 http://www.jstor.org/stable/2780243. Accessed: 24 January 2023.Additional informationFundingThis study was based on a survey, ‘Socio-economic and Demographic Factors Affecting on Hope in the Future in Tehran’ which was supported by the National Institute for Population Research in 2019 with the registered numbers of 20/15283.