Introduction: Does religious voting really exist in secularized democracies?
Kerman Calvo Borobia, Paolo Segatti, José Ramón Montero Gibert
págs. 1-24
Conflicts on moral issues: Christian Churches and societal secularization in Western Europe
págs. 27-59
págs. 60-85
págs. 86-142
págs. 143-162
Religiosity and ideology in Western Europe and the United States
Rosa M. Navarrete, Guillermo Cordero García, Jaime Balaguer de la Riva
págs. 163-199
Comparative religious voting: Mechanisms of politicization in post-cleavage elections
Alberto Sanz, Stefano Camatarri, Paolo Segatti, José Ramón Montero Gibert
págs. 200-229
Austria: Developments and determinants of religious voting
págs. 233-248
Italy: From the religious cleavage to the politics of religious voting
Ferruccio Biolcati Rinaldi, Paolo Segatti, Cristiano Vezzoni
págs. 249-269
Belgium: Changes in Church involvement, pillar organizations, and voting
págs. 270-301
Ireland: Religion and politics
págs. 302-315
France: The persisting relevance of religious voting
págs. 316-340
Spain: Religiosity, ideology, and voting
Kerman Calvo Borobia, Álvaro Martínez, José Ramón Montero Gibert
págs. 341-377
Portugal: Religiosity, party strategies, and voting
págs. 378-404
Germany: Church affiliation, church attendance, and support for Christian Democrats
págs. 407-438
The Netherlands: The role of cultural conservatism among voters and party elites
págs. 439-465
Switzerland: The decline of the religious cleavage
págs. 466-481
Britain: The resilience of religion as an electoral divide
págs. 485-524
Norway, Sweden, and Denmark: Christian Democratic parties and religious voting
págs. 525-548
The United States: Religion and political preferences
págs. 551-578
The United States and Europe: The importance of regimes of religion and State
págs. 579-598
Conclusions: The many facets of religious voting
Paolo Segatti, Kerman Calvo Borobia, José Ramón Montero Gibert
págs. 601-628
© 2001-2024 Fundación Dialnet · Todos los derechos reservados