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ISBN: 0737725710 Year: 2006 Publisher: Farmington Hills, MI Greenhaven Press

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Organizing while undocumented : immigrant youth's political activism under the law
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ISBN: 1479877816 1479803197 Year: 2020 Publisher: New York : New York University Press,


Book
American Islamophobia : Understanding the Roots and Rise of Fear
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ISBN: 9780520297791 9780520970007 0520970004 0520297792 Year: 2018 Publisher: Berkeley, CA : University of California Press,

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"I remember the four words that repeatedly scrolled across my mind after the first plane crashed into the World Trade Center in New York City. 'Please don't be Muslims, please don't be Muslims.' The four words I whispered to myself on 9/11 reverberated through the mind of every Muslim American that day and every day after.... Our fear, and the collective breath or brace for the hateful backlash that ensued, symbolize the existential tightrope that defines Muslim American identity today." The term "Islamophobia" may be fairly new, but irrational fear and hatred of Islam and Muslims is anything but. Though many speak of Islamophobia's roots in racism, have we considered how anti-Muslim rhetoric is rooted in our legal system? Using his unique lens as a critical race theorist and law professor, Khaled A. Beydoun captures the many ways in which law, policy, and official state rhetoric have fueled the frightening resurgence of Islamophobia in the United States. Beydoun charts its long and terrible history, from the plight of enslaved African Muslims in the antebellum South and the laws prohibiting Muslim immigrants from becoming citizens to the ways the war on terror assigns blame for any terrorist act to Islam and the myriad trials Muslim Americans face in the Trump era. He passionately argues that by failing to frame Islamophobia as a system of bigotry endorsed and emboldened by law and carried out by government actors, U.S. society ignores the injury it inflicts on both Muslims and non-Muslims. Through the stories of Muslim Americans who have experienced Islamophobia across various racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic lines, Beydoun shares how U.S. laws shatter lives, whether directly or inadvertently. And with an eye toward benefiting society as a whole, he recommends ways for Muslim Americans and their allies to build coalitions with other groups. Like no book before it, American Islamophobia offers a robust and genuine portrait of Muslim America then and now.


Book
Growing Up Muslim
Authors: --- --- --- --- --- et al.
ISBN: 0801470528 1322522480 0801470536 9780801470530 9780801452529 080145252X 9780801479151 0801479150 Year: 2014 Publisher: Ithaca, NY

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"While 9/11 and its aftermath created a traumatic turning point for most of the writers in this book, it is telling that none of their essays begin with that moment. These young people were living, probing, and shifting their Muslim identities long before 9/11.... I've heard it said that the second generation never asks the first about its story, but nearly all the essays in this book include long, intimate portrayals of Muslim family life, often going back generations. These young Muslims are constantly negotiating the differences between families for whom faith and culture were matters of honor and North America's youth culture, with its emphasis on questioning, exploring, and inventing one's own destiny."-from the Introduction by Eboo PatelIn Growing Up Muslim, Andrew Garrod and Robert Kilkenny present fourteen personal essays by college students of the Muslim faith who are themselves immigrants or are the children of immigrants to the United States. In their essays, the students grapple with matters of ethnicity, religious prejudice and misunderstanding, and what is termed Islamophobia. The fact of 9/11 and subsequent surveillance and suspicion of Islamic Americans (particularly those hailing from the Middle East and the Asian Subcontinent) have had a profound effect on these students, their families, and their communities of origin.


Book
The emancipation of Europe's Muslims : the state's role in minority integration
Author:
ISBN: 9780691144214 9780691144221 0691144222 0691144214 9786613380067 1400840376 1283380064 9781400840373 Year: 2012 Publisher: Princeton, N.J. Princeton University

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"The Emancipation of Europe's Muslims traces how governments across Western Europe have responded to the growing presence of Muslim immigrants in their countries over the past fifty years. Drawing on hundreds of in-depth interviews with government officials and religious leaders in France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, Morocco, and Turkey, Jonathan Laurence challenges the widespread notion that Europe's Muslim minorities represent a threat to liberal democracy. He documents how European governments in the 1970s and 1980s excluded Islam from domestic institutions, instead inviting foreign powers like Saudi Arabia, Algeria, and Turkey to oversee the practice of Islam among immigrants in European host societies. But since the 1990s, amid rising integration problems and fears about terrorism, governments have aggressively stepped up efforts to reach out to their Muslim communities and incorporate them into the institutional, political, and cultural fabrics of European democracy. The Emancipation of Europe's Muslims places these efforts--particularly the government-led creation of Islamic councils--within a broader theoretical context and gleans insights from government interactions with groups such as trade unions and Jewish communities at previous critical junctures in European state-building. By examining how state-mosque relations in Europe are linked to the ongoing struggle for religious and political authority in the Muslim-majority world, Laurence sheds light on the geopolitical implications of a religious minority's transition from outsiders to citizens. This book offers a much-needed reassessment that foresees the continuing integration of Muslims into European civil society and politics in the coming decades."--Publisher's website.

Keywords

Islam --- Sociology of minorities --- Europe --- Muslims --- Islam and state --- Musulmans --- Islam et Etat --- Government policy --- Cultural assimilation --- Legal status, laws, etc. --- Politique gouvernementale --- Acculturation --- Droit --- #SBIB:39A6 --- #SBIB:316.331H421 --- Etniciteit / Migratiebeleid en -problemen --- Morfologie van de godsdiensten: Islam --- Social integration --- Religious aspects --- Islam. --- Inclusion, Social --- Integration, Social --- Social inclusion --- Mohammedans --- Moors (People) --- Moslems --- Muhammadans --- Musalmans --- Mussalmans --- Mussulmans --- Mussulmen --- Religious adherents --- Mosque and state --- State and Islam --- State, The --- Ummah (Islam) --- Sociology --- Belonging (Social psychology) --- Legal status, laws, etc --- Embassy Islam. --- European Islam. --- European democracy. --- European governments. --- European policy approaches. --- European politics. --- Islam Councils. --- Islamist subculture. --- Islamist terrorism. --- Muslim communities. --- Muslim immigrants. --- Muslim integration. --- Muslim minorities. --- Muslim religious associations. --- Muslim religious life. --- Muslims. --- Political Islam. --- Political-Islam activism. --- Political-Islam federations. --- Western Europe. --- civil society organizations. --- demographic trends. --- domestic orientation. --- emancipation. --- foreign government representatives. --- host countries. --- incorporation outcomes. --- institutional integration. --- institutionalization. --- integration problems. --- interior ministries. --- liberal democracy. --- migrant populations. --- nation building. --- national councils. --- new citizen groups. --- oil. --- organizational structures. --- outsourcing. --- political authority. --- political integration. --- politics. --- pre-electoral political behavior. --- religion. --- religious authority. --- religious communities. --- religious community life. --- religious organizations. --- religious representation. --- return-oriented policies. --- social integration. --- state authority. --- state-building challenges. --- stateЭosque relations. --- temporary migration. --- terrorism. --- trade relationships. --- transnational religious NGOs. --- western democracies. --- Muslims - Government policy - Europe --- Muslims - Cultural assimilation - Europe --- Islam and state - Europe --- Muslims - Legal status, laws, etc. - Europe --- Islam - Europe


Book
The making of the medieval middle east : Religion, society, and simple believers
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ISBN: 9780691179094 0691179093 0691203156 069118416X Year: 2018 Publisher: Princeton, NJ : Princeton University Press,

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In the second half of the first millennium CE, the Christian Middle East fractured irreparably into competing churches and Arabs conquered the region, setting in motion a process that would lead to its eventual conversion to Islam. Jack Tannous argues that key to understanding these dramatic religious transformations are ordinary religious believers, often called "the simple" in late antique and medieval sources. Largely agrarian and illiterate, these Christians outnumbered Muslims well into the era of the Crusades, and yet they have typically been invisible in our understanding of the Middle East's history. What did it mean for Christian communities to break apart over theological disagreements that most people could not understand? How does our view of the rise of Islam change if we take seriously the fact that Muslims remained a demographic minority for much of the Middle Ages? In addressing these and other questions, Tannous provides a sweeping reinterpretation of the religious history of the medieval Middle East. This provocative book draws on a wealth of Greek, Syriac, and Arabic sources to recast these conquered lands as largely Christian ones whose growing Muslim populations are properly understood as converting away from and in competition with the non-Muslim communities around them.

Keywords

Middle East --- Moyen Orient --- Religion --- 28 <5-011> --- 28 <5-011> Christelijke kerken, secten. Kristelijke kerken--(algemeen)--Nabije-Oosten. Midden-Oosten --- 28 <5-011> Les diverses Eglises chretiennes:--general--Nabije-Oosten. Midden-Oosten --- Christelijke kerken, secten. Kristelijke kerken--(algemeen)--Nabije-Oosten. Midden-Oosten --- Les diverses Eglises chretiennes:--general--Nabije-Oosten. Midden-Oosten --- Christians-Middle East-History. --- Middle East-Church history. --- Middle East-Religion-History-To 1500. --- RELIGION / Christianity / History. --- Abbasid Baghdad. --- Arab Muslim immigrants. --- Arab conquerors. --- Arab conquests. --- Arab encampments. --- Arabic. --- Chalcedonians. --- Christian Middle East. --- Christian authorities. --- Christian beliefs. --- Christian communities. --- Christian community. --- Christian confession. --- Christian doctrines. --- Christian education. --- Christian history. --- Christian identity. --- Christian leaders. --- Christian literature. --- Christian message. --- Christian movements. --- Christian schools. --- Christian tradition. --- Christianity. --- Christians. --- Christian–Muslim interaction. --- Christian–Muslim relations. --- Church of the East. --- Eucharist. --- Islam. --- Islamic history. --- Islamic tradition. --- Jacob of Edessa. --- Jews. --- Miaphysite church. --- Miaphysite. --- Miaphysites. --- Middle Ages. --- Middle East. --- Middle Eastern Christian. --- Muhammad. --- Muslim habitation. --- Muslim rule. --- Muslim tradition. --- Muslims. --- Prophet. --- Qenneshre. --- Roman Middle East. --- Roman Syria. --- Roman state. --- Syria. --- Syriac language. --- basic education. --- canons. --- church leaders. --- clergy. --- community formation. --- confessional allegiance. --- confessional indifference. --- continuities. --- cultural institutions. --- debate. --- doctrinal difference. --- doctrinal theology. --- educational institutions. --- family connections. --- garrison cities. --- intercultural exchange. --- learned philosophers. --- literacy. --- material benefits. --- medieval Middle East. --- military upheaval. --- monasteries. --- non-Muslims. --- political discontinuity. --- political power. --- post-Chalcedonian. --- religious believers. --- religious claims. --- religious competition. --- religious conversion. --- religious difference. --- religious diversity. --- religious dynamics. --- religious framework. --- religious minority. --- religious motivation. --- religious questions. --- religious tradition. --- religious traditions. --- rival churches. --- sacraments. --- salaf. --- shared experiences. --- shared settings. --- simple Christians. --- simple Muslims. --- simple believer. --- simple believers. --- simple faith. --- simplicity. --- theological literacy. --- theological speculation. --- translations. --- violence.


Periodical
Sociology of religion.
Author:
ISSN: 17598818 10694404 Publisher: Washington, (D.C.) : Association for the Sociology of Religion,

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Sociology of Religion, the official journal of the Association for the Sociology of Religion, is published quarterly for the purpose of advancing scholarship in the sociological study of religion. The journal publishes original (not previously published) work of exceptional quality and interest without regard to substantive focus, theoretical orientation, or methodological approach.

Keywords

Religion and sociology --- Sociologie religieuse --- 316:2 --- 316:2 Godsdienstsociologie --- Godsdienstsociologie --- Periodicals --- Religion and sociology. --- Religionssoziologie --- Zeitschrift --- Periodikum --- Zeitschriften --- Presse --- Fortlaufendes Sammelwerk --- Religion --- Spezielle Soziologie --- Religion and society --- Religious sociology --- Society and religion --- Sociology, Religious --- Sociology and religion --- Sociology of religion --- Sociology --- Soziologie --- Arts and Humanities --- Social Sciences --- General and Others --- Society and Culture --- Doctrine sociale de l'Église. --- Église et problèmes sociaux --- Église catholique --- the gender paradox in work satisfaction and the Protestant clergy --- theological modernism --- cultural libertarianism --- laissez-faire economics in contemporary European societies --- conservative Catholics and the Christian right --- Mormonism --- feminism --- religious diversity and the LDS Church --- radicalization of religious discourse in El Salvador --- Oscar A. Romero --- women's role in historic religious and political movements --- book reviews --- mormons --- female clergy --- gender --- job satisfaction --- individualism --- Republican party --- Creationism --- Molly Mormons --- Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS) --- church hierarchy --- Norway --- political movements --- Lofthus revolt (Norway) --- Thrane movement (Norway) --- Hauge movement (Norway) --- Norwegian Methodism (Norway) --- Y2K --- Apocalypse --- Evangelical Christianity --- Eschatological Belief --- Apocalyptic Catholicism --- evangelicals --- James Davison Hunter --- evangelical morality --- culture wars --- cultural tension --- eligious progressives --- sect-to-church theory --- theoretical developments --- religious organizations --- Christianity in Britain --- Religion and the Future --- End Times --- Macintosh (Apple) --- Macintosh devotion --- operating system (OS) --- technology --- computers --- sociology of religion --- life ethic --- abortion --- abortion opposition --- consistent life --- social isolation --- urban poor --- low-income --- surveys --- church attendance --- congregations --- religious involvement --- volunteering --- Congregations and Social Action --- Soka Gakkai (創価学会) --- new religious movements (NRM) --- Japan --- comparative analysis --- meaninglessness --- religious expression --- reflexive spirituality --- individual religiosity --- Lubavitch movement --- orthodox judaism --- messianic belief --- Lubavitchers --- failed predictions --- failed prophecies --- Italy --- Catholicism --- secularization --- religious market theory --- Italian Catholicism --- moral attitudes --- moral issues --- multi-level analysis --- religious affiliation --- Ghana Demographic and Health Survey (GDHS) --- women --- education --- multivariate analysis --- ethnographic studies --- Chinese immigrants --- assimilation --- ethnic identification --- American way --- social reidentification --- Taiwanese immigrants --- Buddhist immigrants --- Buddhist temple --- outreach strategies --- W.E.B. Du Bois (1868–1963) --- sociological methods --- African Americans --- fundamentalism --- marginality --- conceptualization of religion --- sociology of contemporary religion --- Afro-Brazilian religions --- Argentina --- Tunisia --- Iran --- ulema groups --- denominational affiliation --- social structural inequality --- social conditions --- religious identity --- General Social Survey (GSS) --- class culture --- secularization theory --- Rodney Stark --- Eastern Germany --- theoretical models --- market model --- individualization --- religious changes --- Manifest Destiny --- mission and destiny --- foreign conflict --- George Bush --- Bill Clinton --- Persian Gulf War --- Kosovo conflict --- Max Weber --- Comparative Religions --- Ultra-Orthodox Jews (Haredi) --- Israel --- Judaism --- rabbinical tradition --- Goddess movement --- Goddess pilgrims --- ancient Goddess worship --- female bodies --- pilgrimage --- tourism --- ethnic tourism --- environmental tourism --- historical tourism --- Sheila Larson --- Sheilaism --- religious individualism --- LGBT Christians --- Reformed Protestants --- Netherlands --- El Salvador --- social stratification --- anomie theory --- logistic regression models --- Salvadoran immigrants --- qualitative field research --- Religion and Immigration --- Elite congregations --- urban ecology --- religious districts --- racial-ethnic diversity --- American Congregation Giving Study --- political influence of religion --- religion and politics --- South Carolina --- adolescents --- adolescent religiosity --- adolescents and religion --- statistics --- youth attitudes --- American youth --- American adolescent religiosity --- pluralism --- religious pluralism --- American civil religion --- research --- ethnic homogeneity --- racial homogeneity --- volunteer organizations --- intergroup relations --- social psychology --- network analysis --- case studies --- interviews --- social dynamics --- multiethnic religious organizations --- emotional support --- clergy --- race differences --- self-esteem --- negative interaction --- gender role attitudes --- Arab-American women --- Arab Americans --- religiosity and ethnicity --- SHAS movement (Haredi) --- Pierre Bourdieu --- Bourdieusian Theory --- Bourdeauian --- Jews and Catholics --- social mobility --- social mobility patterns --- The Hague (Netherlands) --- formal log-linear modeling --- descriptive measures --- religion and social position --- Jews and Protestants --- Jews --- Catholics --- Protestants --- Bosnia-Hercegovina --- religion and war --- violence --- ethnic cleansing --- religion and ideology --- Catholic religious nationalism --- religious nationalism --- national identity --- Bosnia-Herzegovina --- European Union --- Central-European countries --- new democracies --- legislation --- religion and state --- Hungary --- Poland --- religious freedom --- Slovenia --- equality of religious communities --- law --- Germany --- anti-cult --- Soviet Union --- Leningrad (Russia) --- religious communities --- dissent movement --- religious searches --- communism --- soviet intellectuals --- atheistic government --- Islam --- social identity --- Soviet atheism --- Islamic identity --- Islamist threat --- Islamic teachings --- social status --- religious service attendance --- race and ethnicity --- religious tradition --- religious preference --- friendships --- religious resource mobilization --- strikes --- religious activists --- Kwame Nkrumah --- Ghana --- Christianity --- Gramscian theory --- Protestantism --- Oaxaca (Mexico) --- Latin America --- religious fragmentation --- Cuernavaca (Mexico) --- Sergio Méndez Arceo (Red Bishop) --- radicalization --- religious participation --- religious competition --- religious women --- catholic women --- transnational religious life --- transnational religiosity --- transnational religious organizations --- campus ministries --- college students --- evangelical organizations --- Korean Americans --- second-generation --- immigrants --- ethnic religious group formation --- ethnicization --- racialization --- religious doubt --- religion and health --- post-communist --- Religious Denominations --- Chinese Communist Party (CCP) --- atheism --- China --- religious research --- scholarship --- cultural change --- ethnic congregations --- immigrant churches --- religious culture --- church participation --- religious activity --- competition theory --- social differentiation --- Catholic ethic --- Protestant ethic --- Gallup and General Social Survey --- volunteerism --- Kemetic Orthodoxy --- internet religion --- cyberspace religion --- revival religions --- ancient Egyptian religion --- ancient Egypt --- Kemeticism --- Asian Americans --- racial formation theory --- American Evangelicalism --- evangelical racial reconciliation theology --- evangelical campus ministries --- white evangelicals --- racial ideologies --- analysis of race --- evangelical feminism --- gender hierarchy --- egalitartianism --- psychism --- Psychism theory --- nonrecursive models --- spirituality --- sociological research --- medieval ecclesia --- Middle Ages --- Juliana Mont-Cornillon --- church-sect typologies --- Feast of Corpus Christi --- micro-processes --- language --- political roles --- academic roles --- religious roles --- roles --- Christian language --- Enlightenment --- reductionism --- information age --- social realism --- sociology of religion in France --- religious identities --- France --- symbolic mediations --- sociological study of religious phenomena --- gender and culture --- feminist theory --- religious identification --- Free Monks (Eleftheroi) --- Greek Orthodoxy --- rock music --- musical expression of religious themes --- religion and music --- Northern Ireland --- social identification --- community construction --- processes of categorization --- social comparison --- race --- prayer --- secular poverty-to-work programs --- faith-based poverty-to-work programs --- social capital --- faith and learning --- religious colleges and universities --- social scientists --- Jewish Israeli social scientists --- sociology of religion in Israel --- liberal morality --- political conservatism --- ideology --- United States (US) --- conservatism --- church and state --- multiculturalism --- masculinity --- Wild at heart --- John Eldredge --- literature --- Promise Keepers (PK) --- evangelicals and abortion --- religion and abortion --- ethnography --- ethnographic research --- conversion --- immigrant Chinese youth --- ethnic socialization --- upward assimilation --- segmented assimilation --- islam --- Muslim Americans --- religious identity development --- September 11 --- muslims --- Saddam Hussein --- Iraq --- religious variables --- political variables --- Iraq invasion --- Korean Protestants --- Korean immigrants --- Korean American Protestants --- cultural traditions --- Korean Protestantism --- ethnic culture --- ethnic identity --- strictness theory --- church growth --- Christian Right --- legislating morality --- liberal individualism --- ritual symbolism --- Catholic Worker community --- religious rituals --- symbols --- male clergy --- Ordained Women and Men Study (1994) --- denominations --- religion diffusion --- missionaries --- human agency --- acculturation --- missionary styles --- Christianity in France --- sect-church dichotomy --- religious economy --- religious market --- evangelical Protestantism --- Catholic priests --- questionnaires --- political ideology --- ecclesial ideology --- religious ethnography --- social identity categories --- social identities --- data gathering and analysis --- Islamic activism --- sharia --- social movements --- Jewish identity --- jews --- homosexuality --- ethnic minority gays and lesbians --- gay and lesbian Jews --- LGBT Jews --- religious groups --- religious group socioeconomic distinctions --- socioeconomic indicators --- female leadership --- parish culture --- low-income mothers --- Taiwan --- religious change --- religious conversions --- chinese society --- Chinese American college students --- Chinese Christians --- Chinese Americans --- microsociological interaction rituals --- conversion patterns --- conversion process --- urban immigrants --- conservative Protestantism --- HIV --- AIDS (HIV) --- evangelical movement --- Catholic nuns --- Buddhist nuns --- Buddhism (US) --- religious syncretism --- appropriation --- religious hybridity --- sect-to-church transition --- sectarianism --- sects --- Yiguandao (一貫道) --- Yiguan Dao (China) --- Sociology of Law --- controversial religious groups --- Donald Black --- African-American AIDS ministry --- AIDS-activism --- ideological reconstruction --- religious behaviors --- religious transmission --- parents --- parental beliefs --- American Jews --- National Jewish Population Survey --- religion and ethnicity --- Jewish Identification --- logistic regression --- American Jewish population --- Jewish denominations --- social networks --- logistic regression techniques --- ordinary least squares (OLS) --- intermarriage --- ethnic capital --- ethnic groups --- religious mobility --- apostasy --- switching --- ethno-apostasy --- religious switching --- George W. Bush --- religious strategy --- war on terrorism --- religious conflicts --- Pakistan --- India --- majoritarianism --- marginalization --- Hindu-Muslim violence --- Hindu-Sikh violence --- Hindutva --- Shiv Sena --- Wenzhou (China) --- post-Mao --- theological camps --- institutional policy and theology --- elections --- General Social Surveys (GSS) --- non-response bias --- religious exclusivism --- religious conservatives --- Faith-Based Initiative --- faith-based liaisons (FBL) --- parental divorce --- young adults --- teenagers --- social desirability --- religious youth --- causal analysis --- American culture and religion --- American Buddhism --- Buddhism in America --- cognitive science --- cognition and religion --- religious attendance --- socioeconomic status (SES) --- American evangelical missionaries --- Pacific Northwest (PNW) --- secularism --- secular humanism --- evangelicalism --- political tolerance --- minority opinions --- civil liberties --- religious congregations --- social service agencies --- social services --- inter-organizational --- agency-congregation --- globalization --- Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople --- Orthodox Church of Greece --- contemporary globality --- contemporary globalization --- ecclesiastical governance --- congregational characteristics --- National Congregations Study (NCS) --- conflict --- charismatic movement --- organizational characteristics --- local congregational culture models --- religion --- Asia and America --- transnational religious connections --- adolescent religion --- National Study of Youth and Religion --- poor and non-poor --- poverty --- Asian American religion --- racial analysis --- Baylor Religion Survey --- sociological patterns --- Protestant congregations --- denomination --- social processes --- immigration --- state support --- Religion and State database (RAS) --- personal control --- divine control --- sexual harassment --- religious institutions --- Orthodoxy --- sexual orientation --- denominational political actions --- political activity --- religious stratification --- conflict theory --- analysis --- quantitative analysis --- religious political action organizations --- National Congregations Study (NCS-II) --- American congregations --- methodology --- sexual intercourse --- National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health --- adolescent sexual behaviors --- adolescent sexual activities --- religious contextual effects --- National Survey of Youth and Religion --- religiosity and mental health --- data analyses --- paranormal beliefs --- Conventional Christian beliefs --- supernatural --- factor analysis --- regression analysis --- compatibility hypothesis --- deviance hypothesis --- marginalization hypothesis --- American colleges and universities --- faculty religiosity --- religious faith and academic life --- evangelical Christianity --- linear secularization --- theories of secularization --- secularization patterns --- ecularization and sacralization --- residential care - assisted living (RC - AL) --- long-term care (LTC) --- religious and spiritual care --- end of life --- spiritual help --- Maria of the Oak (Germany) --- social system theory --- spiritual growth --- The Rainbow (Israel) --- solidarity and individuality --- personal religious identity --- well-being --- World Values Surveys --- hierarchical linear modeling --- government regulation --- life satisfaction --- Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh (Osho) --- Rajneeshpuram (Oregon) --- collective violence --- rural churches --- modernization --- rural communities --- oral tradition --- Indigenous oratory --- Christian nonprofits (US) --- leadership --- compensation --- psychological distress --- Presbyterian Church (US) --- congregational life --- meditation --- Christian Meditation --- US religious service attendance --- sex --- Southern residence --- Catholic affiliation --- socioeconomic status and beliefs about God's influence in everyday life --- ego-affirming Evanglicalism --- Hollywood Church --- religion for workers --- the creative class --- interaction ritual theory sacred harp singing --- second-generation Korean American Churches --- entertainment industry --- interaction ritual theory --- collective effervescence --- Sacred Harp ritual --- second-generation churches --- immigrant adaptation --- identity formation --- Association for the Sociology of Religion --- post-secular society --- religious differences --- Paul Hanly Furfey --- the sacred --- African chiefs --- Robert J. McNamara --- boundary work in inclusive religious groups --- constructing identity --- the New York Catholic Worker --- college --- elite colleges and universities --- progressive Catholicism in Latin America --- Jurgen Habermas --- religious modernity --- Weber and Durkheim --- identity --- inclusion --- I–Thou --- National Longitudinal Survey of Freshmen --- religion and students --- liberation theology --- God --- lived religion --- America --- understanding religious boundaries of national identity in the United States --- God imagery --- opposition to abortion and capital punishment --- religious support for the consistent life ethic --- religious giving and the boundedness of rationality --- worldwide growth of Mormons, Jehovah --- Spiritual Narratives in Everyday Life project (2006-2007) --- Christian America (CA) --- religious divide --- death penalty --- religious giving --- mormonism --- Jehovah's Witnesses --- Seventh-day Adventists --- higher education and theological liberalism --- Born Again --- Balaka --- Pentecostalism --- religious transformation in rural Malawi --- rational choice and interactive ritual theories --- the study of religion --- the Bible --- identity integration --- Christian belly dancers --- religiosity --- Born-Again --- born-again conversion --- rituals --- behavioral strictness --- Belly dance --- identity integration techniques --- adolescent motherhood --- Brazilian favelas --- role conflict --- Evangelical democrats --- Wal-Mart --- religious group identity --- congregations' social composition --- religious congregation --- Brazil --- unmarried mothers --- Republican Party (GOP) --- Baylor Religion Survey (2005) --- Evangelical Democrats --- Evangelical Protestants --- evangelical identity --- key informant interviewing --- U.S. Congregational Life Survey (2001) --- American Islam --- Paul Hanly Furley --- sacred space --- collective memory --- memorializing genocide at sites of terror --- educational attainment and religiosity --- religious financial giving --- atheism in America --- the rejection of theism --- memoryscapes --- memorials --- monuments and memorials --- financial giving --- monetary giving --- Northern Indiana Congregation Study --- Atheist identity --- theism --- irreligion and unbelief --- nonreligion --- scientists and spirituality --- religious content in conversion narratives --- reliious groups --- money --- church cultures --- sacralized frames of giving --- children --- Catholic Second Graders' Agency --- the sacrament of reconciliation --- Anglican orthodoxy --- the symbolic politics of the Anglican communion --- Religion among Academic Scientists survey --- spiritual atheism --- religion and science --- narrative interview process --- conversion narratives --- constant comparison --- grounded theory --- sacralization --- self-sacrificial giving --- religion and children --- religion and homosexuality --- Anglicanism --- parental religiosity --- religious homogamy --- young children's well-being --- the relationship between Catholic action and call to action --- religion and helping others --- values --- ideas --- sociology --- Pentecostal miracles and healings --- religion and family --- child development --- social movement organizations (SMO) --- Catholic Action (CA) --- Christian Family Movement --- Call to Action (CTA) --- social movement theories --- sociology of place --- movement-to-movement transmission --- Midlife in the United States (MIDUS) --- prosocial behaviors --- social techniques --- miracles --- religion and the sense of control --- rural clergy --- United Methodist clergy --- religious involvement and happiness in Taiwan --- secularization in Europe --- NORC General Social Survey (1996) --- sense of control --- rural ministry --- fertility --- European Values Surveys --- European Social Survey (ESS) --- religious decline --- socially engaged religion --- the secular-religious distinction --- Paul Hanley Furfey --- secularism in Western Europe --- Zwolle, the Netherlands --- the charismatic self in everyday life --- Canadian new religious movements --- religious disaffiliation in the United States --- Westphalian modeling --- sociological observation of religion --- transformation --- political secularism --- organizational diversity --- John de Ruiter --- charismatic disenchantment --- Portraits of American Life Study (PALS) --- Evangelical elites --- social networks and religion --- congregational social embeddedness in religious belief and practice --- spiritual individualism --- engaged spirituality --- social implications of holistic spirituality --- Mind-Body-Spirit practitioners --- religious reading --- Baylor Religion Survey (2007) --- religious belief --- congregational social embeddedness --- social embeddedness --- mind–body–spirit (MBS) --- Spiritual Narratives in Everyday Life project (2007-2007) --- the effect of bias in survey measures of church attendance --- Canadian women religious' negotiation of feminism and Catholicism --- religion and social attitudes --- moral judgments toward premarital sex and cohabitation in Brazil --- ethnicity --- perceived barriers to marriage among working-age adults --- measurement errors --- bias --- overreporting --- Ontario (Canada) --- religion and women --- feminism and Catholicism --- union formation --- premarital sex --- religion and sexuality --- Brazilian Protestants --- National Survey of Religion and Family Life (NSRFL) --- marriage --- religious orthodoxy and the American worker --- faith-based humanitarianism --- South Africa --- U.S. Catholic priests --- strength of religious affiliation --- religious population share and religious identity salience --- religion and work --- Economic Values Survey --- organizational behavior --- moral cosmology theory --- workplace --- religious orthodoxy --- institutional isomorphism --- extraversion --- Catholic clergy --- Catholic religious culture --- liberalism --- Los Angeles Times priest survey (2002) --- Catholic dissent --- dissent --- National Jewish Population Survey (2001) --- Jewish population --- evangelical Protestants --- black Protestants --- unaffiliated parents and the religious training of their children --- faith pinnacle moments --- stress --- miraculous experiences, and life satisfaction in young adulthood --- pastoral work --- peer support groups --- United Methodist Church clergy --- faith in the age of facebook --- religion and social network site membership and use --- Evangelical Christian international students in the United States --- worldviews --- religious upbringing --- religious education --- religious experiences --- United Methodist Church (UMC) --- National Study of Youth and Religion (NSYR) --- social media --- social network site (SNS) --- evangelical Christians --- origins and consequences of religious freedoms --- religious self-identification among U.S. Catholics --- moral freighting and civic engagement --- UK --- Putnam and Campbell's Theory of Religious-Based Social Action --- Mexican Americans in religious and nonreligious organizations --- fundraising --- employment --- Evangelical parachurch organizations --- state and religion --- religious restrictions --- self-identification --- Catholic Church --- traditional Catholicism --- liberal Catholicism --- Belonging, Becoming and Participation Grids (BBP) --- Mexican Catholic Church (MCC) --- Mexican ethnic organization (MEO) --- gender dynamics --- Atheism --- Atheist identity and activism --- critical sociology of Atheism --- politics --- religious gender differences --- elite women --- religion and regional culture --- religious commitment --- cultural identity --- the American concept of Biblical Literalism --- activism --- atheist movement --- New Atheism --- religion and gender --- American Pacific Northwest (PNW) --- liberal Protestantism --- Biblical Literalism and sexual morality --- the transposability of a conservative religious schema --- childhood misfortune --- redemption --- adult Born-Again experiences --- role strain theory --- the role of head clergy of racially diverse churches --- religious identity and boundary work --- Christian fraternity --- secularization in Canada --- Berger --- racial-ethnic variations in the consequences of religious participation for academic achievement at elite colleges and universities --- conservative worldviews --- biblical literalism --- literalism --- sexual morality --- born-again Christians --- faith transition --- victimization --- childhood experiences --- interracial --- interracial church clergy --- college campuses --- colleges and universities --- religious group involvement --- Berger's theory of pluralism --- Furfey lecture --- religion in everyday life --- attachment to God --- symptoms of anxiety-related disorders among U.S. adults --- popular religious involvement and Buddhist identity in contemporary China --- young Evangelicals --- negotiating gender --- religious and secular American culture --- religious polarization --- time effects on religious commitment --- workplace-bridging religious capital --- anxiety-related disorders --- anxiety --- Buddhism --- Spiritual Life Study of Chinese Residents --- Buddhist identity --- chinese buddhism --- popular religious involvement --- existential security theory --- popular religion --- gendered evangelical worldviews --- polarization --- cross-sectional surveys --- Great Britain --- Alberta (Canada) --- British Columbia (Canada) --- Congregational Faith at Work Scale (CFWS) --- new, emergent and peripheral religious currents --- religion-state arrangements --- religious markets in the Muslim world --- Evangelical ambivalence toward gays and lesbians --- follower agency and charismatic mobilization in Falun Gong --- religious service attendance and interracial romance --- marital formation and infidelity --- religious markets --- muslim world --- comparative political economy --- LGBT --- gays and lesbians --- human sexuality --- sexuality --- Gay Rights Opponents --- Falun Gong --- Falun Dafa --- Chinese new religious movements --- charisma --- follower agency --- charismatic leadership --- regression models --- endogamy --- marital infidelity --- marital fidelity --- sexual infidelity --- scholarship in the sociology of religion --- religion and gender in sociology --- community formation --- political incorporation --- migration and settlement patterns of the Indian Diaspora --- religious movements --- the significance of religion and spirituality in secular organizations --- religious vitality --- the study of religion in sociology --- the Black Church --- gender and religion --- sociology of migration and immigration --- migration patterns --- religious movement scholarship --- secular organizations --- religious change in China --- Black religious life --- W. E. B. DuBois --- religious reflexivity --- the effect of continual novelty and diversity on individual religiosity --- Paul Hanley Furfey Lecture --- civic engagement among Arab Muslims in the United States --- gendered background expectations in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints --- religion and giving for international aid --- parental religiosity and youth religiosity --- family structure --- Arab Muslims --- civic engagement --- Mormon women --- mormon doctrine --- religion and generosity --- charity --- religious socialization --- Latino protestants and their congregations --- heterodoxy --- heresy --- Bourdieu's concept of doxa --- state-sanctioned exclusion in Pakistan --- faith --- congregational diversity --- racial inequality --- rationalizing judgment day --- Harold Camping's Open Forum Program --- family disruption and racial variation in adolescent and emerging adult religiosity --- Ahmadiyya --- racial attitudes --- race and religion --- multiracial congregations --- cognitive dissonance --- apocalyptic groups --- divorce --- Asian immigrants' participation in religious institutions in the United States --- nonbelievers in the Church --- cultural religion in Sweden --- the natural environment as a spiritual resource --- regional variation in religious adherence --- academics --- conservative Protestants --- bodily manifestations and their interpretation in Pentecostal rituals and everyday life --- immigrant religion --- Asian immigrants --- Asian Protestants --- institutional religious practices --- Church of Sweden --- International Social Survey Program --- natural amenities --- nature --- spatial econometric modeling techniques --- anti-conservative --- academic identity --- interaction rituals --- spiritual experiences --- emotions --- emotional experiences --- somatic manifestations of emotion --- causality --- normativity --- diversity --- U.S. sociology of religion --- paradigmatic reflection --- paranormal investigation as a spiritual practice --- gender and cultivating the moral self in Islam --- Muslim converts --- pornography consumption --- the public sociology of religion --- portrayals of religion --- paranormal --- paranormal investigation --- spiritual practices --- religious observances --- Portraits of American Life Study --- Paul Hanly Furfey Lecture --- Saint Peter --- intergenerational persistence among U.S.-born Catholics since 1974 --- urban church --- social justice activists --- church culture --- pedagogies of conversion to Islam and Christianity --- the sociological study of religious buildings --- organized religion --- disaffection --- managed diversity --- racial diversity --- social justice --- faith-based community organizing (FBCO) --- religious buildings --- Guatemala --- orthodoxy --- temporality and action --- American Protestant denomination --- individualized marriage and family disruption ministries in congregations --- culture --- Latino congregations and youth educational expectations --- relationships with God among young adults --- orthodox communities --- postdivorce --- religious supports --- Latino youths --- Latino adolescents --- religious dynamics --- socioeconomic differences --- personal religiosity --- religious role theory --- God theory --- confirmatory factor analysis --- charismatic leadership in institutionalized religion --- bounded affinity theory of religion and the paranormal --- political engagement --- the prosperity gospel --- African American Christian Zionism --- black Church politics --- the social construction of nonreligious moral identities --- the effect of religion on blood donation in the United States --- institutionalized religion --- charismatic leaders --- bounded affinity theory --- blood donation --- research on American religion in light of the 2016 election --- religious movement --- religiosity in the Tea Party --- the Religious Right --- socio-mental flexibility and multiple religious participation in African-derived Lukumi and Ifa --- religious practices and beliefs among religious stayers and religious switchers in Israeli Judaism --- Tea Party --- presidential elections --- religiosity and political preferences --- volunteers --- Tea Party Movement (TPM) --- Religious Right (RR) --- Christian identity --- multiple religious participation --- socio-mental processes --- religious behavior patterns --- conversion among U.S. Latinos --- economic insecurity --- religiosty --- the European Social Survey 2002-2014 --- the wrath of God --- fatalism and images of God in violent regions of the world --- religion and crime --- Latino Protestants --- Latino Catholics --- assimilation theory --- national origin hypothesis --- semi-involuntary thesis --- fatalism --- Caucasus Barometer --- social control --- social learning --- Catholics and Atheists --- religious identities among gay men --- middle class --- impression management --- middle-class Pentecostals in Argentina --- boundaries of religion and ethnicity among Sikhs --- no religion --- sexual minorities --- faith and sexual identity --- sexual and religious identities --- middle-class congregations --- religious demographics (US) --- Sikh community --- Sikh Dharma --- Christian Natonalism --- Donald Trump --- the 2016 presidential election --- religious resistance to Trump --- progressive faith --- the Women's March on Chicago --- Muslim American activism in the age of Trump --- the emotional management of progressive religious mobilization --- Christian heritage --- Christian nationalist ideology --- Christian nationalism --- Christianity in America --- Christianity (US) --- Democrats (US) --- Republicans (US) --- religious leaders --- Progressive faith communities --- progressive religious activism --- Muslim American --- Muslim American activism --- Faith-based community organizations (FBCO) --- religious mobilization --- assumptions of independence in the study of religion --- patterns of conservative religious belief and religious practice across college majors --- short-term mission travel --- transnational civic remittance --- marijuana use --- binge drinking --- the moral community hypothesis --- complex inequality --- college education and religion --- patterns of religious belief --- education and religion --- Short-term mission (STM) travel --- immigrant effect --- moral community hypothesis --- social ties --- close networks --- transgender experience --- inclusive gender lens in the sociology of religion --- paths to enlightenment --- constructing Buddhist identities in mainland China and the United States --- religion's role in shaping environmental action --- Russian faith --- religiosity and civil society in the Russian Federation --- Portrait of Americal Life Study (PALS) --- religion and social networks --- buddhist identity --- cultural sociology --- environmental action --- religion and environment --- religious beliefs --- environmental policy --- environment protection --- religious diversity --- morality --- immigrants from Ghana --- spiritual seeking --- African Evangelical Christianity --- spiritual but not religious (SBNR) --- logistic and binomial regression --- Karlson–Holm–Breen method --- delinquency --- moral injury --- resonance --- self-transformation --- female converts --- weddings --- marriage ceremonies --- humanist weddings --- traditions --- meaning-constitutive traditions --- refugees --- refugee crisis --- intergenerational religious transmission --- transmission --- transmission of religion --- faith transmission --- microsociological analysis of rituals --- barriers --- Christian congregations --- social distancing --- pandemic --- Covid-19 --- COVID-19 pandemic --- Turkey --- public health --- frontline officials --- personal health behaviors --- public health recommendations --- Covid-19 and religion --- lockdown restrictions (US) --- government restrictions --- pandemic management --- COVID-19 pandemic in Turkey --- interaction ritual chain --- theodicic interpretations --- coronavirus --- coronacrisis --- corona --- Latinx Protestants --- American politics --- religious racialization --- ethnicized religion --- somatic inversions --- Eastern Orthodox fasting --- Theravada Buddhist meditation --- racialized religion --- group identity --- marginalized religious groups --- racialized-religious identity --- Christian population --- church–state --- persecution --- privilege --- politicization of religion --- longitudinal data --- American Muslims --- Black Churches --- LGBQ --- black christians --- non-heterosexuality --- financial crisis --- recession --- internet --- Google Trend (GT) --- information sources --- protestant missionaries --- protestantism --- community cohesion --- civic participation --- interfaith --- African-Americans --- financial strain --- job insecurity --- depression --- cross-national measures --- quantitative methods --- Protestant Christianity --- social change --- religious right --- religious disaffiliation --- white evangelical protestants --- political backlash --- radical flank effects --- political sociology --- roman catholic church --- networked religion --- digital religion --- science and technology --- civil religion --- violent conflict --- existential security --- reproductive rights --- pornography --- urbanicity --- secularisation --- religious amenities --- Brazilian congregation --- LGBT rights --- LGBTQ --- Canada --- immigrant religiosity --- Muslims --- South Asian Muslim immigrants --- Muslim immigrant experiences --- Religion.

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