Challenging the popular belief that people who join new religious movements (NRMs) become “entrapped,” this study describes the way in which 23 former members of 11 different “cults” personally negotiated disaffiliation. The current findings support previous studies that posit exit as a resolution to unresolved doubts and dissonances, and contribute to this literature by suggesting that the nature of these dissonances, and the way in which exit constitutes a “solution” to these dissonances may vary. It is suggested that for approximately half of the participants in this study, the dissonances that precipitated exit, were relatively minor, primarily caused by organizational changes and inconsistencies in the teachings. While generally doubts...
Membership in religious organizations often entails dedicated attention to its dogma, moral vision, ...
The purpose of this study was to try to develop a better understanding of the process that being a m...
Join expert researchers as they walk through current research on disaffiliation patterns of emerging...
Challenging the contemporary belief that emotional damage invariably results from new religious move...
This study examines and analyzes the factors involved in voluntary disengagement (i.e., without the ...
The impact of membership in new, often socially contested, religious movements (NRMs) on mental heal...
The current study investigates the experiences of 23 former members of New Religious Movements (NRMs...
The current study investigates the construction of self in New Religious Movement (NRM) membership a...
Challenging contemporary discourses of emotional damage from involvement in a new religious movement...
In this paper, Dominiek Coates reports on an investigation into the ways in which membership in a Ne...
The purpose of this study is to explore the differences in defectors former religious lives. The lit...
The study of affiliation and disaffiliation from New Religious Movements has until now focused exclu...
The social mechanisms in ideological groups work to promote a cohesive social unit and present signi...
The loss of self and self-identity present as common issues for former members of new religious move...
The current chapter outlines the process through which new Religious Movement (NRM) membership is co...
Membership in religious organizations often entails dedicated attention to its dogma, moral vision, ...
The purpose of this study was to try to develop a better understanding of the process that being a m...
Join expert researchers as they walk through current research on disaffiliation patterns of emerging...
Challenging the contemporary belief that emotional damage invariably results from new religious move...
This study examines and analyzes the factors involved in voluntary disengagement (i.e., without the ...
The impact of membership in new, often socially contested, religious movements (NRMs) on mental heal...
The current study investigates the experiences of 23 former members of New Religious Movements (NRMs...
The current study investigates the construction of self in New Religious Movement (NRM) membership a...
Challenging contemporary discourses of emotional damage from involvement in a new religious movement...
In this paper, Dominiek Coates reports on an investigation into the ways in which membership in a Ne...
The purpose of this study is to explore the differences in defectors former religious lives. The lit...
The study of affiliation and disaffiliation from New Religious Movements has until now focused exclu...
The social mechanisms in ideological groups work to promote a cohesive social unit and present signi...
The loss of self and self-identity present as common issues for former members of new religious move...
The current chapter outlines the process through which new Religious Movement (NRM) membership is co...
Membership in religious organizations often entails dedicated attention to its dogma, moral vision, ...
The purpose of this study was to try to develop a better understanding of the process that being a m...
Join expert researchers as they walk through current research on disaffiliation patterns of emerging...