History and Government Faculty Publications
On the Prospect of Linking Religious Right Identification with Political Behavior: Panacea or Snipe Hunt?
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-2002
Journal Title
Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion
Volume
41
Issue
4
First Page
697
Last Page
710
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1468-5906.00147
Abstract
Although it is a popular topic, the religious right is understudied in two areas. First, scholars have not developed an agreed-upon profile of religious-right adherents at the individual level. Second, little is known about how religious-right status functions as a predictor of political behavior. There is a possibility that religious-right status functions similarly to party identification, as an indicator that is both related to a wide range of variables and capable of functioning independently of those variables as a predictor of political behavior. Using multivariate statistical techniques we analyze survey data that allows respondents to self-identify as members of the religious right. We find that religious-right identifiers are social and theological conservatives who demonstrate high levels of religious commitment. However, they are neither monolithically Republican nor ideologically conservative. Religious-right status does have cross-cutting characteristics, for it is fluid across partisan, ideological, and denominational lines. This status is not, however, politically distinguishing as whatever impact it has on political behavior is apparently subsumed by traditional political variables.
Keywords
Religious right, politics
Recommended Citation
Hood, M. V. III and Smith, Mark Caleb, "On the Prospect of Linking Religious Right Identification with Political Behavior: Panacea or Snipe Hunt?" (2002). History and Government Faculty Publications. 93.
https://digitalcommons.cedarville.edu/history_and_government_publications/93