Conflicted Religionists: Measuring Political Backlash on Salient Issues

Scholars have pointed to “political backlash” as a key reason for why people leave religion in the United States. This study adds to the growing body of work that emphasizes backlash to localized conditions, rather than national-level phenomena, by demonstrating the importance of conflict on salient...

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Main Author: Sean Bock
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2021-05-01
Series:Socius
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/23780231211018005
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spelling doaj-ec1c48beb2234808b2b9af90ac10d8462021-05-21T21:34:26ZengSAGE PublishingSocius2378-02312021-05-01710.1177/23780231211018005Conflicted Religionists: Measuring Political Backlash on Salient IssuesSean Bock0Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USAScholars have pointed to “political backlash” as a key reason for why people leave religion in the United States. This study adds to the growing body of work that emphasizes backlash to localized conditions, rather than national-level phenomena, by demonstrating the importance of conflict on salient issues within churches. Using data from the Baylor Religion Survey, the author exploits a unique set of items to analyze what he calls “conflicted religionists”—those who experience attitudinal conflict with their churches—and measures conflict on two salient issues: same-sex marriage and abortion. The author finds that there is a considerable proportion of conflicted religionists and that the probability of experiencing conflict varies drastically across different groups in the sample. In line with past work, he demonstrates that experiencing conflict is significantly associated with lower church attendance. He concludes with a discussion of the possible pathways available to conflicted religionists.https://doi.org/10.1177/23780231211018005
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sean Bock
spellingShingle Sean Bock
Conflicted Religionists: Measuring Political Backlash on Salient Issues
Socius
author_facet Sean Bock
author_sort Sean Bock
title Conflicted Religionists: Measuring Political Backlash on Salient Issues
title_short Conflicted Religionists: Measuring Political Backlash on Salient Issues
title_full Conflicted Religionists: Measuring Political Backlash on Salient Issues
title_fullStr Conflicted Religionists: Measuring Political Backlash on Salient Issues
title_full_unstemmed Conflicted Religionists: Measuring Political Backlash on Salient Issues
title_sort conflicted religionists: measuring political backlash on salient issues
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Socius
issn 2378-0231
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Scholars have pointed to “political backlash” as a key reason for why people leave religion in the United States. This study adds to the growing body of work that emphasizes backlash to localized conditions, rather than national-level phenomena, by demonstrating the importance of conflict on salient issues within churches. Using data from the Baylor Religion Survey, the author exploits a unique set of items to analyze what he calls “conflicted religionists”—those who experience attitudinal conflict with their churches—and measures conflict on two salient issues: same-sex marriage and abortion. The author finds that there is a considerable proportion of conflicted religionists and that the probability of experiencing conflict varies drastically across different groups in the sample. In line with past work, he demonstrates that experiencing conflict is significantly associated with lower church attendance. He concludes with a discussion of the possible pathways available to conflicted religionists.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/23780231211018005
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