Neighbors Like Me? Religious Affiliation and Neighborhood Racial Preferences among Non-Hispanic Whites

Research on racial residential segregation has paid little attention to the role that social institutions play in either isolating or integrating racial and ethnic groups in American communities. Scholars have argued that racial segregation within American religion may contribute to and consolidate...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Stephen M. Merino
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2011-06-01
Series:Religions
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/2/2/165/
id doaj-9a98938cff3245f493029e6c0592d8b4
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9a98938cff3245f493029e6c0592d8b42020-11-25T00:40:39ZengMDPI AGReligions2077-14442011-06-012216518310.3390/rel2020165Neighbors Like Me? Religious Affiliation and Neighborhood Racial Preferences among Non-Hispanic WhitesStephen M. MerinoResearch on racial residential segregation has paid little attention to the role that social institutions play in either isolating or integrating racial and ethnic groups in American communities. Scholars have argued that racial segregation within American religion may contribute to and consolidate racial division elsewhere in social life. However, no previous study has employed national survey data to examine the relationship between religious affiliation and the preferences people have about the racial and ethnic composition of their neighborhoods. Using data from the “Multi-Ethnic United States” module on the 2000 General Social Survey, this study finds that white evangelical Protestants have a significantly stronger preference for same-race neighbors than do Catholics, Jews, adherents of “other” faiths, and the unaffiliated. Group differences in preferences are largely accounted for by socio-demographic characteristics. Negative racial stereotyping and social isolation from minorities, both topics of interest in recent research on evangelical Protestants and race, fail to explain group differences in preferences.http://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/2/2/165/racesegregationattitudesreligion
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stephen M. Merino
spellingShingle Stephen M. Merino
Neighbors Like Me? Religious Affiliation and Neighborhood Racial Preferences among Non-Hispanic Whites
Religions
race
segregation
attitudes
religion
author_facet Stephen M. Merino
author_sort Stephen M. Merino
title Neighbors Like Me? Religious Affiliation and Neighborhood Racial Preferences among Non-Hispanic Whites
title_short Neighbors Like Me? Religious Affiliation and Neighborhood Racial Preferences among Non-Hispanic Whites
title_full Neighbors Like Me? Religious Affiliation and Neighborhood Racial Preferences among Non-Hispanic Whites
title_fullStr Neighbors Like Me? Religious Affiliation and Neighborhood Racial Preferences among Non-Hispanic Whites
title_full_unstemmed Neighbors Like Me? Religious Affiliation and Neighborhood Racial Preferences among Non-Hispanic Whites
title_sort neighbors like me? religious affiliation and neighborhood racial preferences among non-hispanic whites
publisher MDPI AG
series Religions
issn 2077-1444
publishDate 2011-06-01
description Research on racial residential segregation has paid little attention to the role that social institutions play in either isolating or integrating racial and ethnic groups in American communities. Scholars have argued that racial segregation within American religion may contribute to and consolidate racial division elsewhere in social life. However, no previous study has employed national survey data to examine the relationship between religious affiliation and the preferences people have about the racial and ethnic composition of their neighborhoods. Using data from the “Multi-Ethnic United States” module on the 2000 General Social Survey, this study finds that white evangelical Protestants have a significantly stronger preference for same-race neighbors than do Catholics, Jews, adherents of “other” faiths, and the unaffiliated. Group differences in preferences are largely accounted for by socio-demographic characteristics. Negative racial stereotyping and social isolation from minorities, both topics of interest in recent research on evangelical Protestants and race, fail to explain group differences in preferences.
topic race
segregation
attitudes
religion
url http://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/2/2/165/
work_keys_str_mv AT stephenmmerino neighborslikemereligiousaffiliationandneighborhoodracialpreferencesamongnonhispanicwhites
_version_ 1725288876274089984