رکورد قبلیرکورد بعدی

" Attitudes of the Nonreligious toward Abortion, Contraceptives, and Homosexuality: "


Document Type : AL
Record Number : 1072321
Doc. No : LA115950
Call No : ‭10.1163/15709256-12341400‬
Language of Document : English
Main Entry : Kenan Sevinç
Title & Author : Attitudes of the Nonreligious toward Abortion, Contraceptives, and Homosexuality: [Article] : Comparing the Far East and Western Europe\ Kenan Sevinç
Publication Statement : Leiden: Brill
Title of Periodical : Journal of Empirical Theology
Date : 2020
Volume/ Issue Number : 33/1
Page No : 83–99
Abstract : Numerous studies have shown that the number of nonreligious people in the World is increasing and that people without religious affiliation demonstrate more liberal attitudes on controversial issues than affiliated people. Research suggests these differences may arise from the higher education level of the nonreligious and/or cultural context. To further explore the effects of culture on the attitudes of nonreligious, I analyze data from The Global Attitudes Project-Spring (2013). The data were downloaded from the Association of Religion Data Archives, www.TheARDA.com and were collected by Pew Research Center. When the data were analyzed, 6746 of the participants (18.2%) were found to be nonreligious. Three of the countries with the highest rate of nonreligious are from Western Europe (Czechia=69.5%, Britain=44.4%, Germany=35.3%) and three of them are from Far East (China=83.4%, Japan=45.4%, South Korea=42.6%). I compared attitudes of nonreligious from these countries (N=4581) towards abortion, contraception use, and homosexuality. The results indicate that nonreligious people living in the Far East find abortion, contraceptive use, and homosexuality more “morally unacceptable” than Western Europeans. This suggests that attitudes among the nonreligious are not homogenous, and that cultural factors are important variables to consider in future research. Numerous studies have shown that the number of nonreligious people in the World is increasing and that people without religious affiliation demonstrate more liberal attitudes on controversial issues than affiliated people. Research suggests these differences may arise from the higher education level of the nonreligious and/or cultural context. To further explore the effects of culture on the attitudes of nonreligious, I analyze data from The Global Attitudes Project-Spring (2013). The data were downloaded from the Association of Religion Data Archives, www.TheARDA.com and were collected by Pew Research Center. When the data were analyzed, 6746 of the participants (18.2%) were found to be nonreligious. Three of the countries with the highest rate of nonreligious are from Western Europe (Czechia=69.5%, Britain=44.4%, Germany=35.3%) and three of them are from Far East (China=83.4%, Japan=45.4%, South Korea=42.6%). I compared attitudes of nonreligious from these countries (N=4581) towards abortion, contraception use, and homosexuality. The results indicate that nonreligious people living in the Far East find abortion, contraceptive use, and homosexuality more “morally unacceptable” than Western Europeans. This suggests that attitudes among the nonreligious are not homogenous, and that cultural factors are important variables to consider in future research.
Descriptor : abortion
Descriptor : comparison
Descriptor : contraceptive
Descriptor : Far East
Descriptor : homosexuality
Descriptor : non-religious
Descriptor : Western Europe
Location & Call number : ‭10.1163/15709256-12341400‬
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10.1163-15709256-12341400_17797.pdf
10.1163-15709256-12341400.pdf
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