Journal ArticleDOI
Denominational Pluralism and Chur Ch Membership in Contemporary Sweden
Thorleif Pettersson,Eva Hamberg +1 more
TLDR
In this paper, the authors investigated whether increases in denominational pluralism are followed by the theoretically expected increases in the number of free churches in Swedish municipalities. And they found that, other things equal, increases in free church pluralism led to a comparatively better development of free church membership.Abstract:
Recent theoretical developments within the sociology of religion assume a positive relationship between religious pluralism and religious participation. The relationship is explained by rational choice theory, which suggests that the more competition churches face, the more likely they are to adapt their services to the demands of their potential members and participants. Such market adaptation is expected to result in a diversified supply of religious services and hence to increase the likelihood that consumers can find a religious suply well adapted to their individual tastes. In order to overcome the weaknesses of previous cross-sectional analyses, this study investigates whether increases in denominational pluralism are followed by the theoretically expected increases in denominational membership. The results for the free church sector of 269 Swedish municipalitites show that, other things equal, increases in free church pluralism led to a comparatively better development of free church membership. The effect of the increases in religous pluralism was particularily evident where the level of free church pluralism was relatively low at the beginning of the period under study.read more
Citations
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Book ChapterDOI
Sacred and Secular: The Puzzle of Secularization in the United States and Western Europe
Pippa Norris,Ronald Inglehart +1 more
Book ChapterDOI
European Exceptionalism: Lazy Churches, Pluralism, Adherence and the Case of the Dutch Religious Cartel
TL;DR: In 2001, the Council of European Bishops and Metropolite Jeremie signed an ecumenical charter as discussed by the authors, which committed themselves and their member churches to mainly two points: 1) to get a deeper common understanding of God's revelation and to work on a more visible unity of European Christianity.
Journal ArticleDOI
On the comparative study of religious and cultural change
TL;DR: Pettersson has been a professor of the sociology of religion at the Faculty of Theology in Uppsala since 1988 as mentioned in this paper and has made contributions spanning more than thirty years.
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