Sacred canopies or religious markets? The effect of county-level religious diversity on later changes in religious involvement
Secularization theories, such as Berger's Sacred Canopy argument, hold that religious diversity leads to a decline in religious participation. Religious market models (e.g., Finke and Stark) argue the opposite. Voas, Olson, and Crockett found that nearly all of the vast research exploring this...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1432212020-08-13T07:57:21Z Sacred canopies or religious markets? The effect of county-level religious diversity on later changes in religious involvement Olson, Daniel V. A. Marshall, Joey Jung, Jong Hyun Voas, David School of Social Sciences Social sciences::Sociology Religion Secularization Theory Secularization theories, such as Berger's Sacred Canopy argument, hold that religious diversity leads to a decline in religious participation. Religious market models (e.g., Finke and Stark) argue the opposite. Voas, Olson, and Crockett found that nearly all of the vast research exploring this important question prior to 2002 was flawed due to a previously unrecognized noncausal statistical relationship between measures of religious diversity and measures of religious participation. Since 2002, this methodological issue has largely stymied research on this important topic. We first describe how, following Voas et al.’s recommendations, longitudinal models can overcome these problems. We then apply these methods to data measuring the religious composition of all U.S. counties found in the Religious Congregations and Membership Studies from 1980, 1990, 2000, and 2010. Using multilevel longitudinal regression models, we find that greater county-level religious diversity is followed by later declines in county-level religious participation rates. The negative effect size of religious diversity is large and robust to changes in the control variables and different methods of measuring religious diversity. Accepted version 2020-08-13T07:50:24Z 2020-08-13T07:50:24Z 2020 Journal Article Olson, D. V. A., Marshall, J., Jung, J. H., & Voas, D.(2020). Sacred canopies or religious markets? The effect of county-level religious diversity on later changes in religious involvement. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 59(2), 227-246. doi:10.1111/jssr.12651 0021-8294 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143221 10.1111/jssr.12651 2-s2.0-85084078203 2 59 227 246 en Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion © 2020 The Society for the Scientific Study of Religion. All rights reserved. This paper was published by Wiley in Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion and is made available with permission of The Society for the Scientific Study of Religion. application/pdf |
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Social sciences::Sociology Religion Secularization Theory Olson, Daniel V. A. Marshall, Joey Jung, Jong Hyun Voas, David Sacred canopies or religious markets? The effect of county-level religious diversity on later changes in religious involvement |
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Secularization theories, such as Berger's Sacred Canopy argument, hold that religious diversity leads to a decline in religious participation. Religious market models (e.g., Finke and Stark) argue the opposite. Voas, Olson, and Crockett found that nearly all of the vast research exploring this important question prior to 2002 was flawed due to a previously unrecognized noncausal statistical relationship between measures of religious diversity and measures of religious participation. Since 2002, this methodological issue has largely stymied research on this important topic. We first describe how, following Voas et al.’s recommendations, longitudinal models can overcome these problems. We then apply these methods to data measuring the religious composition of all U.S. counties found in the Religious Congregations and Membership Studies from 1980, 1990, 2000, and 2010. Using multilevel longitudinal regression models, we find that greater county-level religious diversity is followed by later declines in county-level religious participation rates. The negative effect size of religious diversity is large and robust to changes in the control variables and different methods of measuring religious diversity. |
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School of Social Sciences |
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School of Social Sciences Olson, Daniel V. A. Marshall, Joey Jung, Jong Hyun Voas, David |
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Article |
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Olson, Daniel V. A. Marshall, Joey Jung, Jong Hyun Voas, David |
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Olson, Daniel V. A. |
title |
Sacred canopies or religious markets? The effect of county-level religious diversity on later changes in religious involvement |
title_short |
Sacred canopies or religious markets? The effect of county-level religious diversity on later changes in religious involvement |
title_full |
Sacred canopies or religious markets? The effect of county-level religious diversity on later changes in religious involvement |
title_fullStr |
Sacred canopies or religious markets? The effect of county-level religious diversity on later changes in religious involvement |
title_full_unstemmed |
Sacred canopies or religious markets? The effect of county-level religious diversity on later changes in religious involvement |
title_sort |
sacred canopies or religious markets? the effect of county-level religious diversity on later changes in religious involvement |
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2020 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143221 |
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1681058949238882304 |