Abstract
Migration has been proposed as one of the factors that shape cultural similarities across countries. However, studying the relationship between culture and migration has been challenging, in part because culture is difficult to quantify. The traditionally used survey questionnaires have a number of drawbacks, including that they are costly and difficult to scale to a large number of countries. To complement survey data, we propose the use of passively-collected digital traces from social media. We focus on food and drink as markers of a country’s culture. We then measure similarities between countries in terms of food and drink interests using aggregated data from the Facebook Advertising Platform. Methodologically, we offer approaches to measure the similarity between countries with both symmetric and asymmetric indices. Substantively, we assess the association between migration cultural similarity between countries by comparing our measure of cultural similarity with international migration data. In most countries, larger immigrant populations are associated with more similar food and drink preferences between their country of origin and the country of destination. Our results suggest that immigrants contribute to bringing the culture of their home countries to new countries. Moreover, our study identifies considerable variability in this pattern across countries.
Highlights
Acaı bowls are a very popular food in the United States
Since the US is one of the most preferred destinations by immigrants worldwide, we notice that the similarity between the US and the other countries is high when considering interests in foreign food and drink by Facebook users living in the US
Our measures of cultural similarity were compared with the World Value Survey (WVS) data, and we highlighted some advantages of using social media data in this study
Summary
Acaı bowls are a very popular food in the United States. According to The Daily Meal media outlet, acaı bowls were the trendiest breakfast of 2020 (https://www.thedailymeal.com/news/ trendiest-breakfast-of-2020/070920). How can we explain this when Brazil, the home country of acaı, is thousands of miles away from the US?. Despite far distances and differences between cultures, many populations share cultural preferences. Cultures are influenced by economic, political, and demographic changes, with migration being one of the main drivers of cultural changes across countries [1].
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