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This article explores the rise of demography and its role in social theory, examining its relationship with the economy, culture, and politics. It also delves into the mechanisms of technology-mortality and values-fertility, as well as the political ramifications of ethnic differentials. Additionally, it analyzes the implications of the liberal-democratic-capitalist model in the context of religious populations and the potential conflicts it may generate.
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A Dying Creed? The Demographic Contradictions of Liberal Capitalism
The End of History? • Francis Fukuyama 1992 • Economics = Mixed Capitalism • Culture = Liberal Social Attitudes • Political System = Liberal Democracy • Weaknesses to system: military (no), economic (no), revolutionary (no), cultural – (no??), ecological - ??, demographic - ??
The Rise of Demography • Where does demography fit in to social theory (vs. economy, culture, politics)? • Technology-Mortality mechanism in the past (i.e. better weapons, more resources, lower mortality, higher growth) • Values-Fertility mechanism in modernity? (i.e. certain values linked to higher fertility)
The Rise of Demograohy • Demographic Transition Uneven • Ethnic differentials have had political ramifications, but are declining • Ethnic Makeover Accepted. What about religious makeover? • Are religious populations more resistant to transition than secular?
Demography and Politics? • Early Christianity, spread from some 40 converts in 30 A.D. to over 6 million adherents by 300 A.D. • Mormon church: 40 percent growth in past century, widening fertility gap • Evangelical Protestant growth in the 20th c. US: ¾ demographic. 'Red states' have 12-point TFR advantage over 'Blue' in 2004 election • Ethnic conflicts: Quebec, N. Ireland, Fiji, etc • Implications of the liberal-democratic-capitalist 'End of History' model
Q1: Secularisation "As this book will demonstrate: 1. The publics of virtually all advanced industrial societies have been moving toward more secular orientations during the past fifty years. Nevertheless, 2. The world as a whole now has more people with traditional religious views than ever before-- and they constitute a growing proportion of the world's population." (Inglehart & Norris 2004) • Which will dominate: religious fertility or secularisation?
European Islamic Attendance USA Attendance
Fertility. "Conservative, religiously minded Americans are putting far more of their genes into the future than their liberal, secular counterparts…[heavily Mormon] Utah annually produces 90 children for every 1,000 women of child-bearing age. By comparison, Vermont -- the only state to send a socialist to Congress and the first to embrace gay unions -- produces only 49…Fertility correlates strongly with religious conviction" – Philip Longman, The Empty Cradle (2004)
Conclusion: Fertility • After marital status, church attendance and religiosity among the strongest predictors of individual fertility in Europe • Seems to be increasing its predictive power in secularising (Catholic) countries • In secular (Protestant) countries, church attendance insignificant, but religiosity significantly predicts fertility • Future Research: USA, European Muslims, Islamic world
Conclusion: Secularisation • Variation in Patterns of Secularisation • Europe has secularised in terms of church attendance, but not in terms of religious feeling • In Europe, more religious (Catholic) countries are secularising faster, less religious (mainly Protestant) countries have flatlined at very low (5-10%) levels of church attendance • USA and much of the developing world has not secularised • European Muslims show less tendency toward apostasy than Christians
The End of History? • 'End of History' far from certain – indeed, the reverse seems more likely: • Europe: ethnic conflict between secular or moderately religious 'natives' and growing religious (mainly Islamic) immigrant communities • USA: religious conflict which crosses ethnic lines, between secular/moderate religious population and religious fundamentalists
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