Wat is er aan de hand in religieland?

Auteurs

  • Loek Halman Universiteit van Tilburg
  • John Gelissen Universiteit van Tilburg

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54195/RS.11861

Samenvatting

Grace Davie’s (1994) famous characterization of European religiosity in terms of believing without belonging triggered us to elaborate in a more sophisticated way on the interplay between religious beliefs and religious belonging. Using latent class cluster analysis, we explored to what extent there are clusters of people with distinct religious profiles which resemble Davie’s categories, and whether, and if so how they have changed over time. Analyses of the survey data from the European Values Study lead to the conclusion that Davie’s idea can be confirmed, however, only to a very limited extent. There appears strong evidence for the existence of a group of what David Voas (2009) has identified as fuzzy believers. We also concluded that European religious diversity persist and the cross-temporal analysis indicates that a clear distinction has emerged between a small group of countries whose citizens can be predominantly characterized as conventional believers and a larger group of countries with a mixture of fuzzy believers, unconventional believers who do not belong, and conventional religious believers.

Biografieën auteurs

  • Loek Halman, Universiteit van Tilburg

    Loek Halman is werkzaam bij het Departement Sociologie van de School of Social and Behavioral Sciences van de Universiteit van Tilburg.

  • John Gelissen, Universiteit van Tilburg

    John Gelissen is werkzaam bij het Departement Methoden en Technieken van de School of Social and Behavioral Sciences van de Universiteit van Tilburg.

Downloads

Gepubliceerd

01-01-2018

Nummer

Sectie

Artikel

Citeerhulp

Wat is er aan de hand in religieland?. (2018). Religie & Samenleving, 13(1), 28-49. https://doi.org/10.54195/RS.11861