
Publications and Research
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
8-16-2019
Abstract
Researchers have found consistently that religion reduces criminal behavior. Yet rising levels of political violence are frequently attributed to a new wave of religious terrorism. Our study seeks to reconcile this apparent discrepancy by studying the attitudes of people living in 34 African nations. Using data from the Afrobarometer survey and mixed modeling, we examine the influence of individual and collective religiosity for shaping civic engagement and willingness to engage in political violence. While individual religiosity decreases support for violent political action, collective religiosity increases it. The effects of religiosity are the same for Muslims and Christians and the country religious context minimally affects residents’ civic engagement and interest in violent political behavior. Our study underscores the importance of the theoretical and empirical distinction between individual and collective religiosity and offers insight into how civic engagement can be a pathway through which religion shapes support for political violence.
Included in
Other Political Science Commons, Other Sociology Commons, Politics and Social Change Commons, Race and Ethnicity Commons, Social Justice Commons, Sociology of Culture Commons, Sociology of Religion Commons
Comments
Amy Adamczyk and Gary LaFree, “Religion and Support for Political Violence among Christians and Muslims in Africa," Sociological Perspectives 62:948-979. The Author(s) © [2019]. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1177/0731121419866