We analyze how religion affects voting and redistribution. Our model directs attention away from the particular faith, belief or risk attitudes of religious individuals, and emphasizes instead how organized religion opens the door to standard group-based distributive politics. We argue that organized religion makes it possible for the rich and the religious poor to form electoral coalitions in favor of low taxes and limited redistribution. The losers are the secular poor. However, the material reward to the religious poor from supporting such electoral coalitions depends on the institutional context. As state financial support for religion increases, the ideological preferences of the religious poor become aligned with those of the secular ...
Why do some individuals engage in more religious activity than others? And how does this religious ...
This book radically revises established knowledge in comparative welfare state studies and introduce...
State and religion have historically had an uneasy relationship, at times being close allies, at oth...
We analyze how religion affects voting and redistribution. Our model directs attention away from the...
Why some individuals, who would clearly benefit from redistribution, do not vote for parties offerin...
Why are religious groups with greater within-group charitable giving more socially conservative and ...
Why some individuals, who would clearly benefit from redistribution, do not vote for parties offerin...
Religious intensity as social insurance may explain why fiscal and social conservatives and fiscal a...
<div><p>Despite clear evidence of a link between religion and welfare state development, research on...
Why do some countries have religious political parties while others do not? And why are religious pa...
In this paper we study the role of religiosity in political choices such as redistribution and indiv...
This dissertation explores how religious teachings about economic injustice and the moral obligation...
Arguments for and against the existence of an American cultural divide are frequently placed in a re...
Using a county-level population analysis, the author examines whether the interaction between religi...
Current literature presents conflicting findings concerning the effect of religiosity on attitudes t...
Why do some individuals engage in more religious activity than others? And how does this religious ...
This book radically revises established knowledge in comparative welfare state studies and introduce...
State and religion have historically had an uneasy relationship, at times being close allies, at oth...
We analyze how religion affects voting and redistribution. Our model directs attention away from the...
Why some individuals, who would clearly benefit from redistribution, do not vote for parties offerin...
Why are religious groups with greater within-group charitable giving more socially conservative and ...
Why some individuals, who would clearly benefit from redistribution, do not vote for parties offerin...
Religious intensity as social insurance may explain why fiscal and social conservatives and fiscal a...
<div><p>Despite clear evidence of a link between religion and welfare state development, research on...
Why do some countries have religious political parties while others do not? And why are religious pa...
In this paper we study the role of religiosity in political choices such as redistribution and indiv...
This dissertation explores how religious teachings about economic injustice and the moral obligation...
Arguments for and against the existence of an American cultural divide are frequently placed in a re...
Using a county-level population analysis, the author examines whether the interaction between religi...
Current literature presents conflicting findings concerning the effect of religiosity on attitudes t...
Why do some individuals engage in more religious activity than others? And how does this religious ...
This book radically revises established knowledge in comparative welfare state studies and introduce...
State and religion have historically had an uneasy relationship, at times being close allies, at oth...