Editors' Introduction

British voters have “little appetite for overtly religious politics” and therefore conservative Christian political candidate may be excluded because party leaders fear such candidates would lose more votes than they would attract. Providing commentary on a broader European context, Hans Volaard mai...

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Veröffentlicht in:Politics and religion 2013-03, Vol.6 (1), p.1-2
Hauptverfasser: Djupe, Paul A, Wilson, Angelia R
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container_title Politics and religion
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creator Djupe, Paul A
Wilson, Angelia R
description British voters have “little appetite for overtly religious politics” and therefore conservative Christian political candidate may be excluded because party leaders fear such candidates would lose more votes than they would attract. Providing commentary on a broader European context, Hans Volaard maintains that in a largely secular Europe, Christians are regrouping into a “creative minority” in order to convey an “explicitly faith-based message to a broader public.” [...]with his bid for the best title for a journal article, Patrick Schoettmer contributes an interesting analysis of Buddhist political engagement in the US as driven “by private religious practice rather than by communal or small-group religious participation.”
doi_str_mv 10.1017/S1755048313000060
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Cambridge Journals; EBSCOhost Political Science Complete
subjects Cameron, David
Christianity
Political campaigns
Political leadership
Political participation
Political parties
Politics
Rawls, John (1921-2002)
Religion
Religious leaders
Secularism
Voters
title Editors' Introduction
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