Changes in Politics and Religiosity Among Students at a Protestant University

College is a setting and time of profound change in the lives of emerging adults. This change can include shifts in identity related to politics and religion. Given widespread attention to the alignment of religious people with conservative politics and less religious people with liberal politics (i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal for the scientific study of religion 2024-03, Vol.63 (1), p.117-136
Hauptverfasser: Brown, Brandon M., Dougherty, Kevin D., Uecker, Jeremy E., Schnitker, Sarah A., Glanzer, Perry L.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:College is a setting and time of profound change in the lives of emerging adults. This change can include shifts in identity related to politics and religion. Given widespread attention to the alignment of religious people with conservative politics and less religious people with liberal politics (i.e., the “God Gap”), we ask: do college students who become politically liberal lose their religion in the process? Using longitudinal panel data, this study examines changes in political identity and religiosity among students at a Protestant university. Findings reveal changes in students’ politics align with changes in public and private religious behaviors, certainty in belief, agreement with core tenets of the Christian faith, faith maturity, and closeness to God. Whereas students who become more politically conservative increase their religiosity, the inverse is true for those whose politics become more liberal in college.
ISSN:0021-8294
1468-5906
DOI:10.1111/jssr.12891