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You'll never walk alone: Loneliness, religion, and politico‐economic transformation

Annie Tubadji Orcid Logo

Politics and Policy, Volume: 51, Issue: 4

Swansea University Author: Annie Tubadji Orcid Logo

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DOI (Published version): 10.1111/polp.12538

Abstract

The rise of subversive religious beliefs has been recently documented as related to politico-economic radicalization of places that feel left behind. When is the traditional local religious institution so socio-economically inefficient in providing hope for ‘not walking alone’ to become substituted...

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Published in: Politics and Policy
ISSN: 1555-5623 1747-1346
Published: Wiley
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa62605
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first_indexed 2023-02-08T06:50:06Z
last_indexed 2023-02-24T04:19:21Z
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spelling v2 62605 2023-02-08 You'll never walk alone: Loneliness, religion, and politico‐economic transformation f17b08e9124965486f3b5885a87b396d 0000-0002-6134-3520 Annie Tubadji Annie Tubadji true false 2023-02-08 ECON The rise of subversive religious beliefs has been recently documented as related to politico-economic radicalization of places that feel left behind. When is the traditional local religious institution so socio-economically inefficient in providing hope for ‘not walking alone’ to become substituted by subversive religious beliefs on the market for hope? This paper suggests a detailed methodology, linking micro and macro levels, that starts from the quantification of the individual gain from religion as a source for well-being by providing the feeling of “not walking alone”. This micro gain is next used: (i) to evaluate a religious institution in terms of the social welfare that it generates, and (ii) to monitor this religious institution for losing its market to subversive religious beliefs, related to radical politico-economic transformations. To illustrate this methodology, the paper analyses the socio-economic efficiency of the Church of England as a predictive tool for the Brexit-vote. Journal Article Politics and Policy 51 4 Wiley 1555-5623 1747-1346 Religion, loneliness, relative deprivation, social gain from religious institutions, institutional efficiency, political transformation 0 0 0 0001-01-01 10.1111/polp.12538 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/polp.12538 COLLEGE NANME Economics COLLEGE CODE ECON Swansea University SU Library paid the OA fee (TA Institutional Deal) Swansea University 2023-09-04T17:38:22.9474393 2023-02-08T06:45:06.9839623 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Social Sciences - Economics Annie Tubadji 0000-0002-6134-3520 1 62605__28207__7fd331294f6241ba9986a42c66dabecd.pdf 62605.VOR.pdf 2023-07-28T12:08:10.2497211 Output 481504 application/pdf Version of Record true © 2023 The Author. Politics & Policy published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Policy Studies Organization. Distributed under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License (CC BY 4.0). true eng https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
title You'll never walk alone: Loneliness, religion, and politico‐economic transformation
spellingShingle You'll never walk alone: Loneliness, religion, and politico‐economic transformation
Annie Tubadji
title_short You'll never walk alone: Loneliness, religion, and politico‐economic transformation
title_full You'll never walk alone: Loneliness, religion, and politico‐economic transformation
title_fullStr You'll never walk alone: Loneliness, religion, and politico‐economic transformation
title_full_unstemmed You'll never walk alone: Loneliness, religion, and politico‐economic transformation
title_sort You'll never walk alone: Loneliness, religion, and politico‐economic transformation
author_id_str_mv f17b08e9124965486f3b5885a87b396d
author_id_fullname_str_mv f17b08e9124965486f3b5885a87b396d_***_Annie Tubadji
author Annie Tubadji
author2 Annie Tubadji
format Journal article
container_title Politics and Policy
container_volume 51
container_issue 4
institution Swansea University
issn 1555-5623
1747-1346
doi_str_mv 10.1111/polp.12538
publisher Wiley
college_str Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
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hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
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department_str School of Social Sciences - Economics{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Social Sciences - Economics
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/polp.12538
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description The rise of subversive religious beliefs has been recently documented as related to politico-economic radicalization of places that feel left behind. When is the traditional local religious institution so socio-economically inefficient in providing hope for ‘not walking alone’ to become substituted by subversive religious beliefs on the market for hope? This paper suggests a detailed methodology, linking micro and macro levels, that starts from the quantification of the individual gain from religion as a source for well-being by providing the feeling of “not walking alone”. This micro gain is next used: (i) to evaluate a religious institution in terms of the social welfare that it generates, and (ii) to monitor this religious institution for losing its market to subversive religious beliefs, related to radical politico-economic transformations. To illustrate this methodology, the paper analyses the socio-economic efficiency of the Church of England as a predictive tool for the Brexit-vote.
published_date 0001-01-01T17:38:24Z
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