Predicting civil religion at a cross-cultural level Cover Image

Predicting civil religion at a cross-cultural level
Predicting civil religion at a cross-cultural level

Author(s): Sergej Flere, Miran Lavrič
Subject(s): Political psychology, Social psychology and group interaction, Personality Psychology, Psychoanalysis, Sociology of Religion
Published by: Društvo psihologa Srbije
Keywords: civil religion; religiosity; authoritarianism; cross-cultural analysis; anxiety;

Summary/Abstract: The concept of civil religion has caught major attention among scholars studying the junction of religion and politics (J.-J. Rousseau, E. Durkheim, R. Bellah). The notion focuses on the phenomenon of cultural contents sacralizing and ritualizing the ruling political institutions of a society, extending support to the integration of the political and social system at a cultural level. The notion of civil religion has recently been operationalized cross-culturally, but light has not been shed upon its predictors. In this paper authoritarianism is tested as a predictor of civil religion cross-culturally. Four student samples of Bosnian, Serbian, Slovenian and US students were analyzed. Very strong, significant associations between authoritarianism, as operationalized by a modified Lane scale, and civil religion were found in all cases. Moreover, upon introducing femininity, anxiety and gender into the analysis, a strong, dominant and significant impact on the part of authoritarianism was still found when civil religion was observed cross-culturally. When the same predictors were applied to explaining general religiosity, authoritarianism fell short of being a significant predictor in most of the environments observed. Such results suggest an especially close link between civil religion and authoritarianism.

  • Issue Year: 42/2009
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 159-171
  • Page Count: 13
  • Language: English