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To Love Thy Neighbor
Exploring the Role of Religious and Social Belonging on American Polarization
To Love Thy Neighbor
Exploring the Role of Religious and Social Belonging on American Polarization
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Description
While much consideration has been given to the ever-rising levels of polarization in the United States, relatively little attention has been paid to role of belonging in exacerbating or mitigating this phenomenon. Using a novel survey data set, To Love Thy Neighbor: Exploring the Role of Religious and Social Belonging on American Polarization explores how patterns of religious and social belonging, particularly among white evangelicals and the religiously unaffiliated, might be weakening or compounding the issue of our polarized politics. By expanding our notion of religious belonging beyond simple church attendance measures, A. Scott Bledsoe argues that first, the term “evangelical” doesn't really mean what we think it does, as there is a notable amount of variation in what this group believes and how they belong. Second, while deep religious belonging, or bonding social capital, might explain high rates of affective polarization among white evangelicals, it doesn't explain why the religiously unaffiliated experience similar rates of polarization. Finally, Bledsoe finds low levels of social and civic belonging among all Americans, a discovery that has important ramifications for polarization and democracy writ large.
Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Religious Belonging: Bonding Social Capital and Affective Polarization
Chapter 2: Social and Civic Belonging
Chapter 3: A Short History of American Evangelicalism
Chapter 4: Why “Evangelical” Doesn't Mean What We Think It Does
Chapter 5: The Nones: Belonging and Affective Polarization
Conclusion: Belief, Belonging, and Affective Polarization
Appendix: Full Regression Model Results
Product details
| Published | Oct 15 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 176 |
| ISBN | 9781978762121 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Illustrations | 55 figures |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Bledsoe's analysis deepens our understanding of how religious belonging and practices among white evangelicals, as well as the religiously unaffiliated, affect political polarization. But not all is as troubling as commonly believed. His research findings, drawn from original survey data, offer potential avenues for mutual understanding and overcoming divisions. I recommend this work highly for how it goes beyond conventional analyses of the role of religious beliefs and practices in explaining our current political divisions.
Mark J. Rozell, George Mason University, USA
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Understanding religion's place in American polarization is an urgent empirical task with high stakes for the future of democracy. Bledsoe shows that religious belonging, behavior, and beliefs are tied to our society's affective divisions in nuanced ways. A sobering account of challenges within and between religious communities.
David T. Buckley, University of Louisville, USA

























