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Browsing by Author "Bloom, Pazit Ben-Nun"

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    Article
    Citation - WoS: 24
    Citation - Scopus: 29
    Does faith limit immorality? The politics of religion and corruption
    (Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2013) Udi Sommer; Pazit Ben-Nun Bloom; Gizem Arikan; Bloom, Pazit Ben-Nun; Sommer, Udi; Bloompazit, Pazit Ben-Nun; Arikan, Gizem
    Critically considering scholarship relating religiosity to ethical behaviour we contend that religion is systematically related to levels of corruption and that the nature of this relationship is contingent on the presence of democratic institutions. In democracies where political institutions are designed to inhibit corrupt conduct the morality provided by religion is related to attenuated corruption. Conversely in systems lacking democratic institutions moral behaviour is not tantamount to staying away from corrupt ways. Accordingly in non-democratic contexts religion would not be associated with decreased corruption. Time-series cross-sectional analyses of aggregate data for 129 countries for 12 years as well as individual level analyses of data from the World Values Surveys strongly corroborate the predictions of our theory. The correlation of religion with reduced corruption is conditional on the extent to which political institutions are democratic. © 2013 Copyright Taylor and Francis Group LLC. © 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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    Article
    Citation - WoS: 25
    Citation - Scopus: 31
    Globalization Threat and Religious Freedom
    (Blackwell Publishing Ltd customerservices@oxonblackwellpublishing.com, 2014) Pazit Ben-Nun Bloom; Gizem Arikan; Udi Sommer; Bloom, Pazit Ben-Nun; Sommer, Udi; Ben-Nun Bloom, Pazit; Arikan, Gizem
    While arguably central to the human experience religion is a largely understudied component of social life and of politics. The comparative literature on religion and politics is limited in scope and offers mostly descriptions of trends. We know for example that restrictions on freedom of religion are on the rise worldwide. In our theoretical framework the recently higher universal levels of globalization combine with other sources of threat to account for the trend away from religious freedom. As threat to the majority religion increases due to globalization and an increasing number of minority religions freedom of religion is on the decline. Data for two decades from 147 nations are used to test hypotheses. Time-series cross-sectional and mediation models estimated at different levels of analysis with data from two independent sources confirm that threat systematically accounts for changes in religious freedom with globalization playing a key role. © 2013 The Authors. Political Studies. © 2013 Political Studies Association. © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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    Article
    Citation - WoS: 31
    Citation - Scopus: 35
    Priming Religious Belief and Religious Social Behavior Affects Support for Democracy
    (OXFORD UNIV PRESS, 2013) Pazit Ben-Nun Bloom; Gizem Arikan; Bloom, Pazit Ben-Nun; Arikan, Gizem
    The effects of religious belief and religious social behavior on support for democracy are investigated in a priming experiment conducted among Turkish Muslims and Israeli Jews. By varying the question order of World Values Survey (WVS) items which measure religious belief and religious social behavior it was demonstrated that priming religious social behavior facilitates while priming religious belief impedes support for democracy compared with a control group of no prime. These results were independent of participants' intensity of religious belief or the frequency of their religious social behavior and held for the most part across both religious affiliations and political contexts.
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    Review
    Citation - WoS: 47
    Citation - Scopus: 59
    Religion and support for democracy: A cross-national test of the mediating mechanisms
    (Cambridge University Press Journals_subscriptions@cup.cam.ac.uk, 2013) Pazit Ben-Nun Bloom; Gizem Arikan; Bloom, Pazit Ben-Nun; Arikan, Gizem
    Religion can be a source of undemocratic attitudes but also a contributor to democratic norms. This article argues that different dimensions of religiosity generate contrasting effects on democratic attitudes through different mechanisms. The private aspect of religious belief is associated with traditional and survival values which in turn decrease both overt and intrinsic support for democracy. The communal aspect of religious social behaviour increases political interest and trust in institutions which in turn typically lead to more support for democracy. Results from multilevel path analyses using data from fifty-four countries from Waves 4 and 5 of the World Values Survey suggest there is some regularity in mechanisms responsible for the effect of religiosity on democratic support that extend beyond religious denomination. © 2012 Cambridge University Press. © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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    Article
    Citation - WoS: 170
    Citation - Scopus: 187
    Religious social identity religious belief and anti-immigration sentiment
    (Cambridge University Press, 2015) Pazit Ben-Nun Bloom; Gizem Arikan; Marie Courtemanche; Bloom, Pazit Ben-Nun; Ben-Nun Bloom, Pazit; Arikan, Gizem; Courtemanche, Marie
    Somewhat paradoxically numerous scholars in various disciplines have found that religion induces negative attitudes towards immigrants while others find that it fuels feelings of compassion. We offer a framework that accounts for this discrepancy. Using two priming experiments conducted among American Catholics Turkish Muslims and Israeli Jews we disentangle the role of religious social identity and religious belief and differentiate among types of immigrants based on their ethnic and religious similarity to or difference from members of the host society. We find that religious social identity increases opposition to immigrants who are dissimilar to in-group members in religion or ethnicity while religious belief engenders welcoming attitudes toward immigrants of the same religion and ethnicity particularly among the less conservative devout. These results suggest that different elements of the religious experience exert distinct and even contrasting effects on immigration attitudes manifested in both the citizenry's considerations of beliefs and identity and its sensitivity to cues regarding the religion of the target group. © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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    Article
    Citation - WoS: 42
    Citation - Scopus: 49
    Social Values and Cross-National Differences in Attitudes towards Welfare
    (SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD, 2015) Gizem Arikan; Pazit Ben-Nun Bloom; Bloom, Pazit Ben-Nun; Arikan, Gizem; Ben-Nun Bloom, Pazit
    Studies on public opinion about welfare already acknowledge the role context plays in individual attitudes towards welfare. However the much-debated effect of socially held values and beliefs on attitudes towards social policy has not been empirically investigated. Drawing on studies in political and social psychology as well as Shalom Schwartz's work on universal human values this article argues that social values specifically egalitarianism and embeddedness affect individual support for social welfare policies. Moreover we posit that social values condition the effect that individual ideological orientations have on attitudes towards government responsibility such that the effect of embeddedness is much stronger for right-wing and moderate identifiers than those who lean towards the left. We test our hypotheses using data from the European Social Surveys (ESS) and International Social Survey Programme (ISSP) Role of Government module and employing multi-level modelling. Our results provide evidence of the importance of social context and shared values in influencing attitudes towards welfare.
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    Article
    Citation - WoS: 97
    Citation - Scopus: 98
    The effect of perceived cultural and material threats on ethnic preferences in immigration attitudes
    (ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD, 2015) Pazit Ben-Nun Bloom; Gizem Arikan; Gallya Lahav; Bloom, Pazit Ben-Nun; Ben-Nun Bloom, Pazit; Arikan, Gizem; Lahav, Gallya
    This paper shows that cultural and material threats exist side by side serving different psychological functions and that they manifest in differential attitudes towards immigrants from different ethnic or racial origins. While culturally threatened individuals prefer immigrants akin to themselves as opposed to those from different races and cultures the materially threatened prefer immigrants who are different from themselves who can be expected not to compete for the same resources. We test our hypotheses using multilevel structural equation modelling based on data from twenty countries in the 2002 wave of the European Social Survey. The disaggregation of these two types of perceived threat reveals responsiveness to the race of immigrants that is otherwise masked by pooling the two threat dimensions.
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    Article
    Citation - WoS: 16
    Citation - Scopus: 18
    The influence of societal values on attitudes towards immigration
    (SAGE Publications Ltd, 2013) Gizem Arikan; Pazit Ben-Nun Bloom; Bloom, Pazit Ben-Nun; Arikan, Gizem; Ben-Nun Bloom, Pazit
    This paper examines the influence of societal values on individual attitudes towards immigration and immigrants. We argue that conflict between individual and societal values leads individuals to be exposed to frames and opinions that are contrary to their values evokes competing considerations and creates attitudinal ambivalence and volatility. To evade ambivalence individuals whose values are in conflict with those of their society rely less on their core values to construct their attitudes. Using data from the first wave of European Social Surveys and relying on Heteroskedastic Maximum Likelihood Regression we test our argument simultaneously for 18 European countries and show that deviations from society's conservation and self-transcendence values lead to greater ambivalence in attitudes towards immigration and immigrants. Our results provide evidence of the importance of the social context and society's shared values in influencing personal political attitudes and judgments. © The Author(s) 2012. © 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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