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Religiosity and electoral turnout among Muslims in Western Europe
[journal article]
Abstract Investigating the relationship between Islamic religiosity and electoral participation amongst Muslim citizens in Western Europe, this study combines insights from the sociology of religion and Islamic studies with political behavior literature thus creating an improved theoretical framework and a r... view more
Investigating the relationship between Islamic religiosity and electoral participation amongst Muslim citizens in Western Europe, this study combines insights from the sociology of religion and Islamic studies with political behavior literature thus creating an improved theoretical framework and a richer empirical understanding surrounding the electoral participation of religious minorities. First, we theorize about three underlying dimensions of Islamic religiosity: frequency of mosque attendance, religious identification, and frequency of prayer. Subsequently, we consider how the religiosity–voting relationship is bolstered or hindered by hostile national environments such as more exclusionary policies and practices (e.g., veil banning or exclusionary citizenship laws). Empirically, we use a unique dataset that harmonizes five European surveys, resulting in a sample size of just under 8,000 European Muslims. Using multi-level techniques, we find, contrary to research on majority religiosity, that communal religiosity is unrelated to electoral participation. However, individual religiosity bolsters voting in particular among the second generation. Opposite to our expectation, we find that hostile environments do not seem to lead to different impacts of Islamic religiosity within Western Europe. Our results support the taking of a more fine-grained approach when measuring religiosity and also highlight how the impact varies across genders and generations.... view less
Keywords
religion; religious community; Islam; migration; voter turnout; Western Europe; religiousness; identity; discrimination; EVS; exclusion; inclusion; Muslim
Classification
Migration, Sociology of Migration
Sociology of Religion
Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture
Free Keywords
muslim citizens; comparative research; EVS1981-2008 (ZA4804 v3.1.0)
Document language
English
Publication Year
2024
Page/Pages
p. 393-412
Journal
European Political Science Review, 16 (2024) 3
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/S1755773923000334
ISSN
1755-7739
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed