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Religious life in schooled society? A global study of the relationship between schooling and religiosity in 76 countries

[journal article]

Kavadias, Leandros
Spruyt, Bram
Kuppens, Toon

Abstract

The thesis that schooling inevitably leads to secularization continues to be debated. Indeed, while education has become a central and authoritative institution across the world, religiosity seems to persist. An alternative hypothesis proposes that recognizing the cultural aspects of the growth of "... view more

The thesis that schooling inevitably leads to secularization continues to be debated. Indeed, while education has become a central and authoritative institution across the world, religiosity seems to persist. An alternative hypothesis proposes that recognizing the cultural aspects of the growth of "schooled societies" may reveal unexpected compatibilities between education and religiosity. However, research that both empirically integrates these aspects and examines their relationship with religiosity from a global perspective remains scarce. Against this background, this article first constructs a macro-level indicator that taps into cross-national variation in the different dimensions of "schooled societies." Subsequently, we examine its relationship with the subjective importance of religion in people’s lives and individual-level educational differences in religiosity. Results based on data from 94,011 respondents across 76 countries show that in societies that are more “schooled,” people generally tend to be less religious. Moreover, the development of a schooled society moderates the relationship between educational attainment and religiosity. In societies that show more characteristics of a schooled society, especially less educated people are likely to remain religious. Finally, we found that our new indicator for the schooled society explained more variance than other, less fine-grained indicators of this concept. This illustrates the added value of a more comprehensive indicator for the role of schooling as an institution. In the conclusion, we use our findings to outline a research agenda.... view less

Keywords
EVS; religiousness; school education; international comparison; survey research; secularization; level of education

Classification
Sociology of Religion
Sociology of Education

Free Keywords
cross-national comparative research; institutional effects of schooling; European Values Study 2017: Integrated Dataset (EVS 2017) (ZA7500)

Document language
English

Publication Year
2024

Page/Pages
p. 247-270

Journal
International Journal of Comparative Sociology, 65 (2024) 3

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/00207152231177238

ISSN
1745-2554

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.