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El. knyga: Religion, Work, and Inequality

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Work behaviours and inequality in work-based rewards are essential to financial security and general well-being. Although the benefits of receiving work-based rewards, such as income, benefits and retirement packages, are significant, they are not enjoyed uniformly. This title articulates an agenda for better understanding these social processes.

Work behaviours and inequality in work-based rewards are essential to financial security and general well-being. Although the benefits of receiving work-based rewards, such as income, benefits and retirement packages, are significant, they are not enjoyed uniformly. Scholars have invested considerable resources in studying the processes that lead to differential work outcomes, and we know a considerable amount about what places people in the distributions of income and wealth. However, religion is a critical determinant of these outcomes that has attracted little attention. It seems logical that a person's general approach to the world - their religious beliefs or cultural orientation - would be an important determinant of their wealth. After all, the things we consider important and our operating assumptions about how the world does work and how it should work are certain to affect the goals we pursue, our decisions about critical life events, and, ultimately, how well-off we are. This volume brings together major thinkers in the field of religion, work and inequality to explore current research and to articulate an agenda for better understanding these essential social processes.
List Of Contributors
ix
Introduction xi
PART I PATTERNS OF RELIGIOUS STRATIFICATION
Religious Stratification In America
3(24)
James D. Davidson
Ralph E. Pyle
Did The Religious Group Socioeconomic Ranking Change Leading Into The Great Recession?
27(22)
Stephanie Clintonia Boddie
Rebekah P. Massengill
Anne Fengyan Shi
Conservative Protestants, Early Transitions To Adulthood, And The Intergenerational Transmission Of Class
49(26)
Scott T. Fitzgerald
Jennifer L. Glass
PART II RELIGION, OCCUPATIONS, AND WEALTH
Religion And The American Occupational Structure
75(28)
Darren E. Sherkat
Socially Responsible Investing And The Power To Do Good: Whose Dollars Are Being Heard?
103(28)
Jared L. Peifer
Religion And Wealth Across Generations
131(22)
Lisa A. Keister
PART III RELIGION AND EDUCATION
Parental Religiosity And Children's Educational Attainment In The United States
153(30)
Gregory M. Eirich
Religious Nonaffiliation And Schooling: The Educational Trajectories Of Three Types Of Religious "Nones"
183(22)
Rebekah P. Massengill
Carol Ann MacGregor
Religious Affiliation, College Degree Attainment, And Religious Switching
205(22)
Christopher P. Scheitle
Buster G. Smith
No Money, No Honey, No Church: The Deinstitutionalization Of Religious Life Among The White Working Class
227(26)
W. Bradford Wilcox
Andrew J. Cherlin
Jeremy E. Uecker
Matthew Messel
PART IV THE ROLE OF CONGREGATIONS
Race, Class, Congregational Embeddedness, And Civic And Political Participation
253(28)
Philip Schwadel
Mega, Medium, And Mini: Size And The Socioeconomic Status Composition Of American Protestant Churches
281(30)
David E. Eagle
PART V RELIGION AND STRATIFICATION ACROSS NATIONAL BORDERS
Social Stratification And Church Attendance In Contemporary Italy
311(26)
Gabriele Ballarino
Cristiano Vezzoni
Religion, Religiosity, And Cultural Stratification: Theoretical Links And Empirical Evidence
337(32)
Tally Katz-Gerro
Mads Meier Jaeger
PART VI EXPANDING RESEARCH METHODS
A New Approach For Studying Stratification And Religion: Early Results From A National Internet-Based Field Experiment Study Of U.S. Churches
369
Michael Wallace
Bradley R. E. Wright
Christine Zozula
Stacy Missari
Christopher M. Donnelly
Annie Scola Wisnesky