A. Weber
Hasil untuk "United States"
Menampilkan 20 dari ~7429661 hasil · dari DOAJ, Semantic Scholar, CrossRef
D. Gaieski, J. Edwards, M. Kallan et al.
Renee E. Walker, C. Keane, J. Burke
Phillip J. van Mantgem, N. Stephenson, John C Byrne et al.
K. Bozic, S. Kurtz, E. Lau et al.
Benjamin D. Smith, Grace L. Smith, A. Hurria et al.
A. Creanga, C. Berg, C. Syverson et al.
John A. H. Lee
D. B. Allison, K. Fontaine, J. Manson et al.
E. Murphy, S. Bryzman, Williams Ae
Carmen DeNavas-Walt, Bernadette D. Proctor, C. Lee
E. Cook, C. Woodhouse, C. M. Eakin et al.
L. Kann, C. Warren, W. Harris et al.
W. Leontief
S. Scaglione, S. Kliethermes, G. Cao et al.
Shiteng Zhao, Ruopeng Zhang, Yan Chong et al.
Uniform Crime Reporting https ucr.fbi.gov
David Voas, Mark Chaves
Virtually every discussion of secularization asserts that high levels of religiosity in the United States make it a decisive counterexample to the claim that modern societies are prone to secularization. Focusing on trends rather than levels, the authors maintain that, for two straightforward empirical reasons, the United States should no longer be considered a counterexample. First, it has recently become clear that American religiosity has been declining for decades. Second, this decline has been produced by the generational patterns underlying religious decline elsewhere in the West: each successive cohort is less religious than the preceding one. America is not an exception. These findings change the theoretical import of the United States for debates about secularization.
M. Friedman
Saleh H. Fawaeer, Wala’ M. Al-Qaisi, Vlasta Sedláková et al.
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