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Monitoring Trends in Religion - From February 1990 to January 2016

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Orthodox journalism in Russia moves toward professionalization

September 1, 2011 by Richard Cimino

There have been increased efforts toward professionalizing Orthodox media in Russia in recent years, reports Anna Briskina-Müller (University Halle-Wittenberg, Germany) in Religion und Gesellschaft im Ost und West (October). Although some media do not always manage to find a tone different from the older, Soviet-inherited style, some new projects attempt to convey a more modern […]

Filed Under: Archive

Scandinavia a ‘secular heaven’? Not so fast

September 1, 2011 by Richard Cimino

In the past few years, such countries as Denmark and Sweden have been viewed as laboratories demonstrating not only that secularism is alive and well, but that such societies are more prosperous and healthier than religious ones. But such a claim ignores both the changing religious situations in Sweden and Denmark and the Christian influences […]

Filed Under: Archive

Current Research: September/October 2011

September 1, 2011 by Richard Cimino

01: Religion is becoming “deinstitutionalized” among America’s working class, according to a paper presented by Bradford Wilcox at the meeting of the ASA in Las Vegas in August. In an analysis of the General Social Survey (GSS) and the National Survey of Family Growth, researchers found demographic, economic and cultural factors influential in the downturn […]

Filed Under: Current Research

Conservative Jews working with intermarried go below the radar

September 1, 2011 by Richard Cimino

“Faced with the prospects of losing members because of a hostile environment for intermarried couples,” Conservative Jewish synagogues are giving non-Jewish spouses membership opportunities, even if they face disapproval from denominational leadership, reports Forward (Sept. 9). Although the national Conservative leadership opposes membership rights for non-Jews, these dissenting congregations are going beyond the usual efforts […]

Filed Under: Archive

Sizing up 9/11’s effect on Muslim–Christian relations

September 1, 2011 by Richard Cimino

The effects of 9/11 on religious communities has both strengthened and weakened relations between Muslims and Christians. Up until 9/11, there were clear signs of cooperation between conservative Christians and American Muslims on moral and social issues—a coalition that has more or less broken down. A large segment of evangelicals have since become more antagonistic […]

Filed Under: Archive

The Tea Party movement as the ‘new Christian lite’?

September 1, 2011 by Richard Cimino

The Tea Party movement has weak ties to evangelicals and the religious right, even though much of its rhetoric shares some commonality with religious conservatives, according to research presented at the meeting of the American Sociological Association (ASA) in Las Vegas in August, which RW attended. In a survey of 1,800 Tea Party groups, Tina […]

Filed Under: Archive

On/File: July/August 2011

July 1, 2011 by Richard Cimino

01: The appointment of Jim Daly as president of Focus on the Family, succeeding founder James Dobson, suggests a transition in the organization from its more political stance to a more irenic posture stressing its original family concerns. Since his appointment in 2009, Daly has eschewed the often-heated political rhetoric employed by Dobson and has […]

Filed Under: On/File

Findings & Footnotes: July/August 2011

July 1, 2011 by Richard Cimino

01: In Reflections of an Accidental Sociologist (Prometheus Books, $26), prominent sociologist of religion Peter Berger recounts his long and varied career, in the process providing readers with an interesting and often humorous look at religious developments in the last 50 years. Writing about one’s graduate education, professorial appointments and research projects can make for […]

Filed Under: Findings & Footnotes

Religious tourism in India shows varied economic outcomes

July 1, 2011 by Richard Cimino

In India, 35 of the top 50 domestic tourist destinations are religious sites. At the ISSR conference, Kiran A. Shinde (University of New England, Australia) presented a paper on economic opportunities in religious tourism showing how different types of religious devotions and different organizational structures result in various levels of impact upon local communities. According […]

Filed Under: Archive

Japan’s ‘experimental Buddhism’ capitalizing on temple/community ties

July 1, 2011 by Richard Cimino

An “experimental Buddhism” marks a growing number of temples in Japan, as priests seek to adapt their organizations to changes in society, while often bypassing their denominations in the process, according to an article in the Journal of Global Buddhism (Vol. 12, 2011). John Nelson writes that it is widely recognized that the traditional Buddhist temple […]

Filed Under: Archive

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