A more narrow definition of a
cultural conflict dates to
Daniel Bell's 1962 essay, "Crime as an American Way of Life", and focuses on
criminal-enabling consequences of a clash in cultural values.
William Kornblum defines it as a conflict that occurs when conflicting
norms create "opportunities for
deviance and criminal gain in
deviant subcultures." Kornblum notes that, whenever laws impose cultural values on a group that does not share those views (often, this is the case of the majority imposing their laws on a minority), illegal markets supplied by criminals are created to circumvent those laws. He discusses the example of
prohibition in the
interbellum United States, and notes how the cultural conflict between pro- and anti-alcohol groups created opportunities for illegal activity; another similar example he lists is that of the
war on drugs. Kornblum also classifies the cultural conflict as one of the major types of
conflict theory. In
The Clash of Civilizations Samuel P. Huntington proposes that people's cultural and religious identities will be the primary source of conflict in the post-
Cold War world. ==Influence and understanding==