Political commentators tend to assume that Americans who share a particular religious affiliation think similarly about values issues and that values questions are aligned. Although religious affiliation is a strong predictor of attitudes toward abortion and gay rights, there is differentiation within denominational subgroups with respect to both; for example, while majorities of mainline Protestants and Catholics favor gay marriage, many of their respective co-religionists do not. Further, aggregate survey data shows asynchrony in within-group attitudes on abortion and gay rights; for example, whereas Hispanic Catholics are more likely to support gay marriage than legal abortion, black Protestants are more likely to support legal abortion ...
This article seeks to extend literature on Latinos' policy preferences by examining the influence of...
This paper examines two questions. First, how stable is religiosity over time? Second, how does reli...
Scholars and laypeople have become concerned that American religion and politics has increasingly di...
Early studies of race and abortion attitudes revealed significant variations; however, recent resear...
National survey data are used to examine the conflicting values that underly the mixed stance that t...
Early studies of race and abortion attitudes revealed significant variations; however, recent resear...
This article assesses the importance of religious affiliation, observance, faith and party choice in...
The subjective correlates of abortion attitudes for six different religious traditions (Roman Cathol...
The influence of reli~on on attitudes toward abortion is nova a welbstuclied phenomenon. Past resear...
Does race or religion have a greater impact on abortion attitudes? It appears that being white, or H...
Abstract Despite the interest-group perspective that women should be more likely than men to support...
Objective. The goal of this article is to examine the relationship between religious involvement, ga...
The relative importance of respect for human life and sexual conservatism as rationales for oppositi...
Abstract Despite the interest-group perspective that women should be more likely than men to support...
This article assesses the importance of religious affiliation, observance, faith and party choice in...
This article seeks to extend literature on Latinos' policy preferences by examining the influence of...
This paper examines two questions. First, how stable is religiosity over time? Second, how does reli...
Scholars and laypeople have become concerned that American religion and politics has increasingly di...
Early studies of race and abortion attitudes revealed significant variations; however, recent resear...
National survey data are used to examine the conflicting values that underly the mixed stance that t...
Early studies of race and abortion attitudes revealed significant variations; however, recent resear...
This article assesses the importance of religious affiliation, observance, faith and party choice in...
The subjective correlates of abortion attitudes for six different religious traditions (Roman Cathol...
The influence of reli~on on attitudes toward abortion is nova a welbstuclied phenomenon. Past resear...
Does race or religion have a greater impact on abortion attitudes? It appears that being white, or H...
Abstract Despite the interest-group perspective that women should be more likely than men to support...
Objective. The goal of this article is to examine the relationship between religious involvement, ga...
The relative importance of respect for human life and sexual conservatism as rationales for oppositi...
Abstract Despite the interest-group perspective that women should be more likely than men to support...
This article assesses the importance of religious affiliation, observance, faith and party choice in...
This article seeks to extend literature on Latinos' policy preferences by examining the influence of...
This paper examines two questions. First, how stable is religiosity over time? Second, how does reli...
Scholars and laypeople have become concerned that American religion and politics has increasingly di...