Part I. Introduction: 1. Introduction; 2. Clergy, congregants, and religious politicians; 3. Methods and case studies; Part II. What Clergy Think, Say, and Do: 4. What clergy think and say: religious teachings and political views; 5. What clergy do: encouraging partisan and electoral politics; Part III. How Congregants Respond: 6. Church influence on citizens' policy views and partisanship; 7. Church influence on voting behavior; 8. Church influence on citizen support for democracy; Part IV. Representation: 9. The representational triangle; 10. Conclusion: mobilizing the people of God.
Evangelical and Catholic groups are transforming Brazilian politics. This book asks why, and what the consequences are for democracy.
Amy Erica Smith is associate professor of political science at Iowa State University. Smith's research has attracted funding from the National Science Foundation, Fulbright, Mellon, and Templeton, and the Award for Early Achievement in Research at Iowa State University. Her work on democracy in developing countries has appeared in top political science journals and in the Portuguese-language book, Legitimidade e qualidade da democracia no Brasil: Uma visão da cidadania (2011; with Lucio Rennó, Matthew Layton, and Frederico Batista Pereira).
'Smith expertly and seamlessly draws together observational
research, interviews, multiple surveys, and experiments to provide
a breathtakingly comprehensive account of the complex dynamics that
connect clergy, congregants, and politics. As they compete for
souls and resources in a fluid religious marketplace, clergy are
capable of strengthening democratic commitment and participation …
and of reinforcing conservative politics to tip the balance of
Brazil's culture and politics. This extraordinary book will engage
and enlighten all those who seek to understand the intersection of
religion and democracy in Brazil and beyond.' Elizabeth J.
Zechmeister, Cornelius Vanderbilt Professor of Political Science,
Vanderbilt University, Tennessee
'Amy Erica Smith's book is unique, original and, in the Brazilian
context above all, extremely timely. Combining multiple databases
with qualitative observation, this is both an impressive technical
achievement and an invaluable contribution to international debates
about the implications of religious partisanship for democratic
coexistence.' David Lehmann, University of Cambridge and author of
Struggle for the Spirit: Religious Transformation and Popular
Culture in Brazil and Latin America
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