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Secularization as Declining Religious Authority*

  1. Mark Chaves
  1. The University of Notre Dame
  1. Direct all correspondence to the author, Department of Sociology, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556.

Abstract

Secularization is most productively understood not as declining religion, but as the declining scope of religious authority. A focus on religious authority (1) is more consistent with recent developments in social theory than is a preoccupation with religion; (2) draws on and develops what is best in the secularization literature; and (3) reclaims a neglected Weberian insight concerning the sociological analysis of religion. Several descriptive and theoretical “pay-offs” of this conceptual innervation are discussed: new hypotheses concerning the relationship between religion and social movements; the enhanced capacity to conceptually apprehend and empirically investigate secularization among societies, organizations, and individuals; and clearer theoretical connections between secularization and other sociological literatures. Ironically, these connections may indeed spell the end of secularization theory as a distinct body of theory, but in a different way than previously appreciated.

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Impact Factor: 1.736

5-Yr impact factor: 2.588

Editor-in-Chief

Arne L. Kalleberg


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Oxford Open RCUK Open Access

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