The religious experience as affecting ambivalence: the case of democratic performance evaluation in Israel |
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Authors: | Pazit Ben-Nun-Bloom Mina Zemach Asher Arian |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Political Science , Tel Aviv University , Tel Aviv , Israel pbennun@notes.cc.sunysb.edu;3. Dahaf Public Opinion Research Institute , Tel Aviv , Israel;4. Department of Political Science , The City University of New York Graduate Center , New York , USA;5. The Israel Democracy Institute , Jerusalem , Israel |
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Abstract: | Religiosity increases both criticism and instability in democratic performance evaluations, and accordingly decreases reliance on these assessments in the construction of political self-efficacy, trust in institutions, and patriotism. This is due to the conflicting experiences that religious citizens of democracies live through; while their personal religious environment often adheres to many undemocratic characteristics, their experience as citizens contains assorted democratic attributes. These results, from heteroskedastic maximum likelihood models using data from a 2006 representative survey among Israeli Jews, augment the exclusive focus of the literature of democratic attitudes on the strength of attitudes, and shift attention from policy attitudes to other evaluative judgements. |
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Keywords: | religiosity ambivalence democratic performance evaluations value conflict Israel |
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