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Cambridge Studies in Social Theory, Religion and Politics

This series delves into the complex and often tumultuous relationship between religion and politics in the contemporary world. It publishes scholarship aiming to understand and explain the dynamic shifts occurring at their intersection, drawing on social theory and original empirical analysis. The books offer insights for a broad audience interested in societal transformations. It examines how faith influences political behavior, civil society engagement, and the cultural underpinnings of public life.

Religion, Class Coalitions, And Welfare States
Sacred and Secular
Religious Persecution and Political Order in the United States
Resurrecting Democracy
  • Resurrecting Democracy

    • 492 pages
    • 18 hours of reading

    This book assesses the construction of citizenship as an identity, a performance, and a shared rationality.

    Resurrecting Democracy
    4.1
  • This book demonstrates that although advanced societies have been moving toward secular orientation, the world has more people with traditional religious views.

    Sacred and Secular
    4.0
  • This book radically revises established knowledge in comparative welfare state studies and introduces a new perspective on how religion shaped modern social protection systems. The interplay of societal cleavage structures and electoral rules produced the different political class coalitions sustaining the three welfare regimes of the Western world. In countries with proportional electoral systems the absence or presence of state–church conflicts decided whether class remained the dominant source of coalition building or whether a political logic not exclusively based on socio-economic interests (e.g. religion) was introduced into politics, particularly social policy. The political class-coalitions in countries with majoritarian systems, on the other hand, allowed only for the residual-liberal welfare state to emerge, as in the US or the UK. This book also reconsiders the role of Protestantism. Reformed Protestantism substantially delayed and restricted modern social policy. The Lutheran state churches positively contributed to the introduction of social protection programs.

    Religion, Class Coalitions, And Welfare States
    4.7