Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Religiosity: Evidence from Germany

Kanol, Eylem; Michalowski, Ines

Forschungsartikel (Zeitschrift) | Peer reviewed

Zusammenfassung

How does a major external shock that potentially threatens the community and the individual impact religiosityin the context of ongoing secularization? Do individuals in a rich and secularized society such as Germany reactto potential community-level (sociotropic) and individual-level (egotropic) threat with heightened religiosity? Weestimate multilevel regression models to investigate the impact of sociotropic and egotropic existential securitythreats associated with the COVID-19 pandemic on individuals’religiosity. Our data come from a rolling cross-sectional online survey conducted in Germany among 7,500 respondents across 13 waves in 2020. Our findingssuggest that a global health pandemic such as COVID-19 increases individuals’ perception of existential andeconomic threat, which, in turn, leads to an increase in religiosity. However, this relationship is only true foregotropic existential security threat but not for sociotropic threat. We discuss the theoretical implications of these findings.

Details zur Publikation

FachzeitschriftJournal for the Scientific Study of Religion
Jahrgang / Bandnr. / Volume0 (online first)
Ausgabe / Heftnr. / Issue0
Seitenbereich1-19
StatusVeröffentlicht
Veröffentlichungsjahr2023 (03.05.2023)
Sprache, in der die Publikation verfasst istEnglisch
DOI: 10.1111/jssr.12834
Stichwörterreligiosity, COVID-19, Germany, existential security, economic insecurity

Autor*innen der Universität Münster

Kanol, Eylem
Institut für Soziologie (IfS)
Michalowski, Ines
Professur für Religionssoziologie (Prof. Michalowski)
Exzellenzcluster 2060 - Religion und Politik. Dynamiken von Tradition und Innovation