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The Role of Gender in the Politics of Female and Male Protestant Clergy

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Abstract:

The important effect of gender on American politics is a
well-established feature of contemporary American politics at both the
mass and elite levels. However, exactly how gender matters is open to
considerable debate. In this paper, we test several hypotheses about
how gender affects politics among an increasingly important set of
activists: clergy in the major Protestant denominations. We employ data
from a major new survey of clergy in twenty-two religious traditions to
test our hypotheses.
Previous research has found a considerable gender gap in political
alignment between female and male clergy, with female clergy being more
liberal and Democratic. Women clergy have also been found to be more
active in politics than their male counterparts. Can these differences
between assigned directly to gender, or are other factors at work? And
if gender does have an independent effect on political attitudes and
behaviors, by what means is gender connected to politics? We will
develop and test a path model of political alignment and political
participation among female and male clergy. We will employ four types
of variables. (1) We will investigate basic demographic factors, such
as education and age, as it may be that differences by gender are
products of these other factors. (2) We will consider theological
orientations, as it may be that gender differences are attributable to
views of biblical authority and similar religious beliefs. (3) We will
consider the impact of personal experience: perhaps women differ from
men because professional experiences, including minority status within
their denominations and gender discrimination. (4) We will consider the
institutional context in which clergy work, such as the denomination’s
view of women clergy and encouragement by male colleagues. It may be
that gender gaps result from the presence or absence of specific
opportunities that confront female and male clergy.
We expect to find that gender has a small, direct influence on
political alignment and participation after controlling for all these
factors. However, we expect larger indirect influences through other
demographic, theological, personal, and contextual variables. Thus, the
analysis will reveal evidence of how gender matters, but also whether
gender is likely to be fundamental determinant of political attitudes
and actions.

Most Common Document Word Stems:

polit (205), women (92), gender (92), clergi (89), liber (53), theolog (49), denomin (44), model (42), align (38), american (37), discrimin (34), social (34), church (33), variabl (33), activ (32), ns (31), mainlin (31), opportun (31), also (30), univers (30), press (29),
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Association:
Name: The Midwest Political Science Association
URL:
http://www.indiana.edu/~mpsa/


Citation:
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MLA Citation:

Olson, Laura., Green, John., Crawford, Sue. and Deckman, Melissa. "The Role of Gender in the Politics of Female and Male Protestant Clergy" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the The Midwest Political Science Association, Palmer House Hilton, Chicago, Illinois, Apr 15, 2004 <Not Available>. 2008-10-10 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p82706_index.html>

APA Citation:

Olson, L. R., Green, J. , Crawford, S. E. and Deckman, M. M. , 2004-04-15 "The Role of Gender in the Politics of Female and Male Protestant Clergy" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the The Midwest Political Science Association, Palmer House Hilton, Chicago, Illinois Online <.PDF>. 2008-10-10 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p82706_index.html

Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript
Review Method: Peer Reviewed
Abstract: The important effect of gender on American politics is a
well-established feature of contemporary American politics at both the
mass and elite levels. However, exactly how gender matters is open to
considerable debate. In this paper, we test several hypotheses about
how gender affects politics among an increasingly important set of
activists: clergy in the major Protestant denominations. We employ data
from a major new survey of clergy in twenty-two religious traditions to
test our hypotheses.
Previous research has found a considerable gender gap in political
alignment between female and male clergy, with female clergy being more
liberal and Democratic. Women clergy have also been found to be more
active in politics than their male counterparts. Can these differences
between assigned directly to gender, or are other factors at work? And
if gender does have an independent effect on political attitudes and
behaviors, by what means is gender connected to politics? We will
develop and test a path model of political alignment and political
participation among female and male clergy. We will employ four types
of variables. (1) We will investigate basic demographic factors, such
as education and age, as it may be that differences by gender are
products of these other factors. (2) We will consider theological
orientations, as it may be that gender differences are attributable to
views of biblical authority and similar religious beliefs. (3) We will
consider the impact of personal experience: perhaps women differ from
men because professional experiences, including minority status within
their denominations and gender discrimination. (4) We will consider the
institutional context in which clergy work, such as the denomination’s
view of women clergy and encouragement by male colleagues. It may be
that gender gaps result from the presence or absence of specific
opportunities that confront female and male clergy.
We expect to find that gender has a small, direct influence on
political alignment and participation after controlling for all these
factors. However, we expect larger indirect influences through other
demographic, theological, personal, and contextual variables. Thus, the
analysis will reveal evidence of how gender matters, but also whether
gender is likely to be fundamental determinant of political attitudes
and actions.

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Abstract Only All Academic Inc.
Associated Document Available The Midwest Political Science Association
Associated Document Available Political Research Online

Document Type: .pdf
Page count: 32
Word count: 8342
Text sample:
THE ROLE OF GENDER IN THE POLITICS OF FEMALE AND MALE PROTESTANT CLERGY* Laura R. Olson Clemson University laurao@clemson.edu John C. Green University of Akron green@uakron.edu Sue E. S. Crawford Creighton University crawford@creighton.edu Melissa M. Deckman Washington College mdeckman2@washcoll.edu Prepared for the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association The Palmer House Hilton Chicago April 15-18 2004 * The authors wish to thank Corwin Smidt for coordinating the Cooperative Clergy Research Project under the auspices of which the
America. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. Wilcox Clyde. 1996. Onward Christian Soldiers? The Religious Right in American Politics. Boulder CO: Westview. Wuthnow Robert. 1988. The Restructuring of American Religion: Society and Faith since World War II. Princeton NJ: Princeton University Press. Wuthnow Robert. 2000. “The Moral Minority.” The American Prospect. May 22. Wuthnow Robert and John H. Evans eds. 2002. The Quiet Hand of God: Faith-based Activism and the Public Role of Mainline Protestantism ed. Robert Wuthnow and John


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