Secularization – an empirically consolidated narrative in the face of an increasing influence of religion on politics

Autores/as

  • Gert Pickel Universidade de Leipzig

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5007/2175-7984.2017v16n36p259

Resumen

With this research Gert Pickel proposes an updated version of secularization’s narrative, contrasting it with the growing phenomena of religious pluralism, secular-religious polarization, and religiosity’s politicization in Europe. This article focuses especially on the European religious landscape of the late twentieth and early twenty-first century, analyzing the empirical developments in its indices of secularization, namely at the individual level. For this purpose, the author calls upon several statistical data that consider individuals’ attitudes towards religion, bearing in mind the different levels of modernization, as well as the political, religious and historical-cultural vicissitudes of the different countries. Despite religious affair’s proliferation in public debate, this article concludes that secularization remains empirically more convincing than the narrative of the return of religions. However, we are still far from speaking of a secular Europe.

Biografía del autor/a

Gert Pickel, Universidade de Leipzig

Professor de Sociologia da Religião na Faculdade de Teologia da Universidade de Leipzig (Alemanha).

Publicado

2017-10-17

Número

Sección

Dossiê Temático