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Explaining How Uruguay Became a "Religious Ghetto"

Explaining How Uruguay Became a "Religious Ghetto"
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摘要 Given Latin America's historical and robust religiosity, how do sociologists explain that Uruguay became an extremely secular society since the turn of the twentieth century? Earliest attempts to interpret and explain Uruguayan secular society came in the 1960s from Uruguayan scholars. Typically, these studies were produced by religious practitioners, or at least researchers sympathetic to religion, who attributed weak religiosity, at least weak Catholicism, to two factors: the lack of a colonial heritage and European immigration. Counterfactuals to the "weak institution" and the "social base" claims are based on new research, especially as it pertains to immigration and settlement patterns among Italian and Spanish immigrants. The counter-arguments presented here, while not entirely invalidating the "social base" and "weak institutional church" claims make it more difficult to assume that urban demographics and ecclesiastical history in Uruguay are significantly correlated to the secularization of Uruguayan society. This study is important because it creates theoretical space that should stimulate researchers to consider alternative causes for Uruguayan secular society that provide greater explanatory power by integrating historically contingent evidence in the context of theoretical explanation
作者 Stephen Armet
出处 《Sociology Study》 2018年第1期26-41,共16页
关键词 COLONIZATION IMMIGRATION social composition mutual aid societies Uruguay 乌拉圭 宗教 犹太人 研究人员 社会学 拉丁美洲 人口分布 历史
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