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Woodberry, Robert D.; Park, Jerry Z.; Kellstedt, Lyman A.; Regnerus, Mark D.; Steensland, Brian – Social Forces, 2012
Our original article espoused a simple way to recode religious groups on the General Social Survey (GSS) into historically meaningful categories and attempted to steer social scientists away from assigning these groups to a "Liberal-Moderate-Conservative" scale (Smith 1990). Among other problems, such scales create arbitrary cutpoints,…
Descriptors: Protestants, Religion, Religious Factors, Measurement
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Rosenfeld, Michael J. – Social Forces, 2008
This article compares marriage patterns by race, education and religion in the United States during the 20th century, using a variety of data sources. The comparative approach allows several general conclusions. First, racial endogamy has declined sharply over the 20th century, but race is still the most powerful division in the marriage market.…
Descriptors: African Americans, Race, Protestants, Jews
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Welch, Michael R.; Sikkink, David; Loveland, Matthew T. – Social Forces, 2007
Data from the 2002 Religion and Public Activism Survey were used to examine relationships among measures of religious orientation, embeddedness in social networks and the level of trust individuals direct toward others. Results from ordered logistic regression analysis demonstrate that Catholics and members of other denominations show…
Descriptors: Trust (Psychology), Protestants, Religion, Social Networks
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Moore, Laura M.; Ovadia, Seth – Social Forces, 2006
Prior research has shown that individuals living in the South express significantly less tolerant attitudes than the rest of the nation, while individuals residing in urban areas express significantly more tolerant attitudes than their rural peers. The authors seek to explain these generally unspecified Southern and urban effects by identifying…
Descriptors: Geographic Location, Education, Religion, Rural Urban Differences