I believe the answer is largely sociocultural and economic.
sociocultural in American English
(ˌsoʊsioʊˈkʌltʃərəl; ˌ soʊʃiˌoʊˈkʌltʃərəl)
adjective
of or involving both social and cultural factors
sociocultural in American English
(ˌsousiouˈkʌltʃərəl, ˌsouʃi-)
adjective
of, pertaining to, or signifying the combination or interaction of social and cultural elements
Derived forms
socioculturally
adverb
Word origin
[1925–30; socio- + cultural]This word is first recorded in the period 1925–30. Other words that entered Englishat around the same time include: buildup, decibel, distinctive feature, gimmick, turnaroundsocio- is a combining form used, with the meanings “social,” “sociological,” or “society,”in the formation of compound words. Other words that use the affix socio- include: sociobiology, sociodrama, socioeconomic, sociolinguistics, socioreligious
Examples of 'sociocultural' in a sentence
sociocultural
It's hard to think how a sociocultural observation could be more fabulously wrong.
Times, Sunday Times (2014)
Some of the pattern can be attributed to sociocultural differences.
Times, Sunday Times (2011)
His writing is dense, exact, demanding, and he ranges freely among fields of knowledge and aspects of sociocultural experience.