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      Religion, Cultural Clash, and Muslim American Attitudes About Politically Motivated Violence : ISLAM AND POLITICAL VIOLENCE

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      Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion
      Wiley-Blackwell

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          Shaping attitudes about homosexuality: the role of religion and cultural context.

          Across the globe, the debate over homosexuality continues, with great variation in public opinion about the acceptability of homosexuality, laws regulating same-sex unions and penalties for homosexual sex behaviors. Religion is often seen as an important predictor of attitudes about homosexuality. However, cross-national differences in cultural orientations suggest that the role religion has in explaining homosexual attitudes may depend on a nation's cultural context. In this study, we merge ideas from cultural sociology and religious contextual effects to explain cross-national variation in public opinion about homosexuality. Using data from the fourth wave of the World Values Survey and Hierarchical Modeling techniques, we find support for the micro and macro effects of religion and a survival vs. self-expressive cultural orientation. Moreover, we find that personal religious beliefs have a greater effect on attitudes about homosexuality in countries like the United States, which have a strong self-expressive cultural orientation.
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            Religion and support for suicide attacks.

            In four studies carried out across different cultural, religious, and political contexts, we investigated the association between religion and popular support for suicide attacks. In two surveys of Palestinians and one cognitive priming experiment with Israeli settlers, prayer to God, an index of religious devotion, was unrelated to support for suicide attacks. Instead, attendance at religious services, thought to enhance coalitional commitment, positively predicted support for suicide attacks. In a survey of six religions in six nations, regular attendance at religious services positively predicted a combination of willing martyrdom and out-group hostility, but regular prayer did not. Implications for understanding the role of religion in suicide attacks are discussed.
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              When Islam and Democracy Meet

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion
                JOURNAL FOR THE SCIENTIFIC STUDY OF RELIGION
                Wiley-Blackwell
                00218294
                May 2015
                May 22 2015
                : 54
                : 2
                : 242-260
                Article
                10.1111/jssr.12185
                89f2eae3-7814-4eb2-a727-7550eaa70b75
                © 2015

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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