AT THE INTERSECTION OF FAITH, ALLEGIANCES TOWARD THE STATE, AND ECONOMIC DEPRIVATION: THE CASE OF THE CHRISTIAN DEMOCRATIC UNIONS IN 19TH CENTURY WESTERN EUROPE Cover Image

AT THE INTERSECTION OF FAITH, ALLEGIANCES TOWARD THE STATE, AND ECONOMIC DEPRIVATION: THE CASE OF THE CHRISTIAN DEMOCRATIC UNIONS IN 19TH CENTURY WESTERN EUROPE
AT THE INTERSECTION OF FAITH, ALLEGIANCES TOWARD THE STATE, AND ECONOMIC DEPRIVATION: THE CASE OF THE CHRISTIAN DEMOCRATIC UNIONS IN 19TH CENTURY WESTERN EUROPE

Author(s): Başak Taraktaş
Subject(s): Political history, Social history, Economic policy, Politics and religion, History and theory of political science, Sociology of Politics, Sociology of Religion
Published by: Rasim Özgür DÖNMEZ
Keywords: Christian Democracy; Christian Democratic Unions; Cleavages; Industrialization; Denominational Differences;

Summary/Abstract: Why were Christian democratic unions (CDUs) among workers and farmers more proactive in some Western European states than in others? Marxist theories explain union activity by industrialization. However, CDUs were not the most active in the late 19th century in rapidly industrializing states, e.g., Italy and Germany. Using social identity theory and Lipset’s & Rokkan’s cleavage theory, this paper conducts process tracing on the German, French, Italian, Dutch, and Belgian cases to test the following argument: CDUs were more likely to develop in states where anticlerical attacks unleashed a center-periphery conflict. CDUs are less likely to expand in states where anticlerical attacks precipitated a church-state conflict. The presence of a Catholic minority moderated this relationship. In the Protestant-dominant states, Catholicism allowed for mobilizing individuals and maintaining cohesion. The Lutheran states’ hostility toward Catholic activism and the regional concentration of the minority accentuated this denominational difference, which catalyzed CDU development.

  • Issue Year: 14/2022
  • Issue No: 3
  • Page Range: 612-640
  • Page Count: 29
  • Language: English