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Religion and Attitudes Towards State Organizations: The Case of Schools. A Comparison Across Five Countries

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Minority Youth and Social Integration

Abstract

We explore the links between religion/religiosity and school attitudes among junior high school students in five countries (France, Germany, the Netherlands, the UK and the USA). Socialization of children is undertaken, in part, through schools that equip them with skills, instill values and impose rules and sanctions (compulsory attendance, behavioural standards). Attachment or detachment vis-à-vis school may be critical in the socialization of children and their integration into broader society. Using multilevel models and controlling for socio-economic indicators, we find small effects of religious denomination (Muslim pupils being less attached) and religiosity (more religious children being more attached), as well as that of minority concentration (attending schools with minority concentration leads to lower attachment). This is an important finding, indicating that while such effects can be statistically significant, the main causes do not lie in variables related to religion or religiosity. Even in countries such as France and the UK where ethnicity, a variable interlinked with denomination, is a predictor of more distrust and tensions with the police, such a mechanism does not appear to be strong regarding schools. Survey data are from the UPYC dataset and the ISDR3 questionnaire.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    Factor analysis is a technique for analysing categorical data, similar to principal component analysis. The first axis identified by the factor analysis accounts for most of the variance of the selected variables.

  2. 2.

    For users of the ISRD dataset: the variable names are schbond2, schbond3 and schbond4.

  3. 3.

    For users of the ISRD dataset: the variable names are workfath, workmoth, deprfam and deprsel.

  4. 4.

    For a recent example, see a census-representative survey of 11,282 people across the EU and 1052 people in the USA conducted in December 2016 by Dalia Research. Non-religious adults accounted for 58% of the French population, 54% in the UK and 40% in Germany. https://daliaresearch.com/religion-in-the-eu-young-germans-more-religious-than-old/ (Accessed on 22 July, 2017).

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Correspondence to Sebastian Roché .

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Appendices

Appendix 1

Table 5.2 Multilevel linear regression models explaining attachment to school for the 4 European countries

Appendix 2

Table 5.3 Multilevel linear regression models explaining attachment to school for France
Table 5.4 Multilevel linear regression models explaining attachment to school for Germany
Table 5.5 Multilevel linear regression models explaining attachment to school for Netherlands
Table 5.6 Multilevel linear regression models explaining attachment to school for UK

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Roché, S., Astor, S. (2018). Religion and Attitudes Towards State Organizations: The Case of Schools. A Comparison Across Five Countries. In: Roché, S., Hough, M. (eds) Minority Youth and Social Integration. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-89462-1_5

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-89462-1_5

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