Institution and Personal Homophobia in Sub-Saharan Africa, Andrew Ormsby

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Table of Contents

Abstract 2

Introduction: Homophobia as a Contemporary Issue. 2

Defining Homophobia and the Theoretical Scope. 5

The Colonial Legacy of Homophobia...........................................................................................7

The Influence of Colonialism on Materialist Attitudes in Africa  8

The Post-Materialist Explanation for African Homophobia. 9

Economic Development and Societal Interests  11

Education as an Avenue for Tolerance    13

Religion in Africa  14

Hypotheses. 17

Measurements and Methods. 19

The Need for a Better Indicator  19

Operationalizing Homophobia  20

Institutional Homophobia Dependent Variable  21

Independent Variables  26

Country-Level Results. 29

The Causes of Institutional Homophobia  30

The Cause of Personal Homophobia  34

Individual-Level Results. 39

Individual-Level Methods  39

Individual-Level Findings  42

Discussion. 45

Appendix A: Summary Statistics. 55

Table A1: Independent Variable Statistics Summary  55

Table A2: Summary of Dependent and Independent Variable Statistics by Country  56

Appendix B: Individual-Level Data. 58

Table B1: Individual-Level Statistics Summary  58

Table B2: Summary Statistics for Countries in the 5th and 6th World Values Surveys  59

 

 

Abstract

            Sub-Saharan Africa is currently the most homophobic place in the world in terms of both state institutions and public opinions. Many scholars have blamed this on the former colonial powers of Africa who imposed homophobic policies on their landholdings. In order to explain variations in African homophobia, this study conceptualizes homophobia in two forms: institutional, using a measure of the homophobic actions of African states, and personal, using a composite score of multiple opinion surveys regarding homosexuality. Using linear regression models, this paper contends that Inglehhart’s post-materialist framework does a much better job of explaining variation in homophobia within Sub-Saharan Africa than could be explained by colonial influence alone. While colonial influence seems to have had a lasting impact on the homophobic culture of many Sub-Saharan states, the reinforcement of religious norms through economic underdevelopment also appears to be crucial in explaining contemporary African homophobia.

Introduction: Homophobia as a Contemporary Issue

            Walking home from a soccer game on an empty street in Cape Town, Mvuleni Fana was ambushed by several men. They jumped her in the back of an alley, each man beating and raping her one at a time. The perpetrators knew about her sexual orientation, and before leaving her unconscious told her, “After everything we're going to do to you, you're going to be a real woman, and you're never going to act like this again” (Strudwick 2014). A similar story was told by Lungile Dladla who was walking home one evening with her fellow gay companion when, out of the dark, an armed man approached them. He tied their hands and feet, telling them “Ja, today I want to show you that you’re girls,” and proceeded to rape them both. Dladla’s case was not taken seriously at the police station because of her “butch” appearance, and more tragically she nearly died years later because she had contracted HIV from the encounter (Hunter-Galt 2012). In South Africa, “corrective rape” represents a daily threat for many lesbians. In fact, gay women are assaulted nearly twice as often as their heterosexual counterparts (Hunter-Galt 2012). Even more disheartening, South Africa is seen as one of the most gay-friendly countries in Africa. It is only one of two countries in the region to have legalized gay marriage, and is the only one to include protections for gay citizens in its constitution. In other countries in the region homosexual acts are penalized by life imprisonment or even the death penalty.

            Today, Sub-Saharan Africa is the most homophobic region in the world in terms of public opinion (Horowitz et. al. 2013; McCarthy 2014). At the same time as gay marriage’s legalization in 35 of 50 U.S. states, and the adoption of LGBT rights by the international community as a human rights issue, many African countries continually embrace ever-harsher penalties for homosexual acts. At this moment homosexuality is illegal in over 70% of African countries (“Making Love a Crime” 2013). This begs the question: “what explains homophobia within Sub-Saharan Africa today?” Current literature largely places the blame on colonial institutions, which originally installed most of the homophobic laws in the region (Asal 2013; Gupta 2008; Han and O’Mahoney 2014; Ireland 2013; Itaborahy and Zhu 2013; “Making Love a Crime” 2013; Sanders 2009), but this explanation fails to illustrate the larger picture. The interpretation hinges on a Euro-centric view that the actions of underdeveloped countries revolve around Western powers, and completely disregards the fact that Third World countries control their own fate. In the contemporary era, a uniquely homophobic culture has developed within the region. African governments have largely decided to go the opposite direction of their former colonizers who have become much more liberal in terms of the rights granted to the LGBT community. Countries such as Burundi, Ethiopia, Gambia, Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, and Zimbabwe have all instituted either new or revised laws within the twenty-first century, which carry prison terms for homosexual behavior (Itaborahy and Zhu 2013).

            Clearly, a broader framework needs to be presented to explain homophobia within Sub-Saharan Africa. This paper argues that Ronald Inglehart’s post-materialist theory, which postulates that economic development leads to greater social tolerance of issues such as homosexuality, can incorporate both colonial and contemporary factors to explain variations in African homophobia. To accomplish this analysis, I isolate factors previously identified as central to the development of global homophobia and use linear regression models to see if the factors’ relationships to variations in African homophobia agree with Inglehart’s predictions. Previous studies have addressed economic development (Anderson and Fetner 2008; Han and O’Mahoney 2014; Wike and Horowitz 2007), education (Bobo and Licari 1989; Herek 1991), religion (Asal 2013; Epprecht 2013; Han and O’Mahoney 2014; Shoko 2010), and colonial rule (Asal 2013; Gupta 2008; Han and O’Mahoney 2014; Ireland 2013; Itaborahy and Zhu 2013; “Making Love a Crime” 2013; Sanders 2009) as some of the most salient aspects of homophobia within countries worldwide. I employ two types of homophobia (institutional and personal) to investigate the relationship between the aforementioned variables and Sub-Saharan homophobia. Through the statistical analysis, I posit that Inglehart’s theory largely supports variations in institutional and personal homophobia within Sub-Saharan Africa. It appears that both types of homophobia are largely influenced through religious cultural norms, which are upheld in underdeveloped states, and secularized in economically more developed African nations. It is posited that African governments lose their incentive to act in discriminatory ways through this process of secularization, and populations become more tolerant of homosexuality when they are both economically secure and no longer derive their moral convictions from traditional cultural norms. Colonial influence appears to have made an impact on the development of both types of homophobia, while the influence of education largely remains unclear.

            In the following analysis, I will begin by first defining the two types of homophobia in order to set the boundaries of the study. Inglehart’s post-materialistic theory is then explained and postulated as an explanation for both types of homophobia within the Sub-Saharan region. Economic development, education, religion, and colonization are framed within the boundaries of Inglehart’s theory as a way to analyze the current homophobic climate of the region. Subsequently, several hypotheses are presented, which are tested by separate regression models for each type of homophobia. An individual-level analysis of the Sub-Saharan countries in the fifth and sixth World Values Surveys follows to corroborate the results taken from the analysis on personal homophobia. Finally, a discussion and conclusion highlight how this study’s findings can help understand institutional and personal homophobia in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Defining Homophobia and the Theoretical Scope          

            As a term, homophobia has been utilized in a vast array of settings, which has contributed to a misleading meaning. While literally translating to an irrational fear of homosexuals, it has adopted a more encompassing framework that includes “anger, hatred, bias, ignorance, jealousy, or other sources of antipathy toward queer persons” (Thoreson 2014).[1] Authors have previously broken homophobia down into several levels. These generally include institutional, interpersonal, personal, and societal (Blumenfeld 1992, Raja and Stokes 1998). In the following analysis, I study two dimensions of homophobia, institutional and personal, in order to study related, but distinct, dimensions of the term simultaneously.

            Institutional homophobia is the systemic exclusion and discrimination of homosexuals through the actions of governments or state organizations (Raja and Stokes 1998, 118). Institutional homophobia encompasses a broad perspective of society as it includes governmental actions and rhetoric, state-sponsored violence, and the behavior of organizations within a country, along with other structural aspects. On the other hand, personal homophobia is the intolerant beliefs held by individuals in society regarding homosexuals (Raja and Stokes 1998, 118). These beliefs include viewing homosexuality as immoral or having hateful feelings towards gay individuals. The two terms address both the system of discrimination as well as the intolerant views of communities within states that together lie beneath homophobic cultures. Viewed side by side, the terms more fully contribute to an understanding of homophobia as a whole. By separating homophobia into these two terms, this analysis mirrors other studies that have broken down other types of discrimination, such as sexism and racism, into both an individual-level and a broader society-wide level of analysis (Arreola et. al. 2014; Herek 1996; Fiske 2001; Raja and Stokes 1998).

            Since the terms are fundamentally different, with diverging causal factors, they must be measured independently from one another. Having said this, institutional and personal homophobia are not completely independent of one another; laws can change public opinion, and public opinion has an effect on the language and severity of the laws. Therefore, it cannot be claimed that one type contributes more to the homophobic climate than the other; instead both must be looked at simultaneously in order to gain a holistic understanding of homophobia in the region.

The Colonial Legacy of Homophobia
            Many scholars have argued that colonial rule has shaped the current landscape and polices of African countries especially in regards to issues concerning homosexuality (Asal 2013; Gupta 2008; Han and O’Mahoney 2014; Ireland 2013; Itaborahy and Zhu 2013; “Making Love a Crime” 2013; Sanders 2009). Their case is bolstered by a British historical legacy of discriminatory policies and actions towards gays. This legacy started in the 19th century when Britain imported the first anti-sodomy laws into their African landholdings from section 377 of the Indian Penal Code, which they had themselves written to bring ‘civilized’ behavior to the backwardness of their indigenous colonies (Gupta 2008). The laws made “carnal intercourse against the order of nature with any man, woman or animal” illegal for any person within the British domain and henceforth made rigid heterosexuality the sexual norm. Most African countries formerly colonized by the British still utilize this language in anti-homosexual laws today.
            In contrast anti-sodomy laws were largely absent in places colonized by the French because homosexuality had been de-criminalized in the 18th century with the Napoleonic Penal Codes, which legalized activities done in privacy (Sanders 2009). While the French enacted some types of anti-sodomy laws in a few colonies, such as in the modern areas of Benin, Cameroon, and Senegal, in order to assert social domination, most places remained free of the discriminatory measures taken by the British (Gupta 2008). Today, 38 out of 54 countries in Africa ban the practice of homosexuality, and the region has some of the harshest anti-gay laws in the world (“Making Love a Crime” 2013). The vast majority of the countries banning homosexuality were formerly British landholdings, while most of the areas colonized by the French have no anti-gay laws in place (“Making Love a Crime” 2013). Indeed, Patrick Ireland’s work on sodomy laws in the region found that a significant portion of variation in homophobic legislation was explained by being a former British landholding.

            But while the colonial explanation for contemporary homophobia is compelling, it ignores the fact that modern discrimination is a complex phenomenon, which cannot be explained simply by a colonial past. Colonialism certainly appears to have set the stage for African homophobia, but fails to fully explain modern enactment of homophobic laws as well as modern forms of homophobia outside the scope of criminalization. For instance, several Sub-Saharan countries, including Burundi, Ethiopia, Gambia, Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, and Zimbabwe, have all adopted either new or revised legislation with prison sentences for homosexual behavior within the last 15 years (Itaborahy and Zhu 2013). It is important to remember that African countries declared their independence from Europe decades ago, so there must be uniquely African and strictly contemporary reasons for homophobia to have become so entrenched in the region in the 21st century. Therefore, it is paramount to investigate other causes of African homophobia in order to look beyond colonialism as the only explanation.

The Influence of Colonialism on Materialist Attitudes in Africa

            This paper contends that the colonial legacy can be incorporated into the broader framework of Inglehart’s post-materialist theory in order to explain African homophobia. Instead of viewing colonialism as the cause of African homophobia, post-materialism sees it as setting the stage for the future homophobic culture of the region. Post-materialism suggests countries follow path-dependent avenues of development according to their cultural heritage (Inglehart 1999). They develop in this way because the cost of changing cultural norms is expensive, especially for underdeveloped countries, and so they remain relatively unchanged over time (Asal 2013). Through the developmental process, states’ interests shift in a predictable way from economic to social as they shift from materialist to post-materialist, but specific policies and cultural norms within societies reflect a common history.

            Colonialism might also reflect on social attitudes in states in a path-dependent manner. Homophobic laws dating back to the 19th century could help form both norms about the morality of homosexuality, and set the stage for later discriminatory institutions. African countries under the same European authority would therefore be expected to develop political institutions and social values that reflect similar feelings about homosexuality. Under this framework, areas with harsher anti-gay legal systems under colonial rule would be expected to retain that legal code in the future, and store the principles of those laws in their cultural beliefs. However, even with a shared culture, countries should be able to shift their social outlooks as they develop economically (Inglehart 1999). Previous research supports this notion, finding that countries formerly colonized by the British do in fact have more homophobic laws than countries not colonized by the British, but the research also suggests that they do not take any longer to de-criminalize homosexuality than other states (Han and O’Mahoney 2014). This indicates that heritage may influence the political and social landscape of a country down the road, but does not determine it. Instead common heritage simply gives countries a similar developmental starting place and trajectory over time, which is influenced by modern conditions.

The Post-Materialist Explanation for African Homophobia

            Ronald Inglehart’s post-materialist theory predicts countries will develop similarly over time according a country’s economic conditions (1987, 1990, 1997, 1999). Accordingly, populations within pre-industrialized countries exhibit materialist behavior, which reflects the needs of the emerging working class (Inglehart 1987). At an early stage in economic development, average citizens are more concerned about their own economic well-being than society-wide social injustices because of a day-to-day struggle to survive. As a result, newly industrializing societies tend to focus their resources on policies that will attain economic growth in order to improve society’s overall quality of life. Traditional values and norms characterize societies with dominantly materialist attitudes because they do not yet have the time or political/physical resources to revise their norms in socially salient ways.

            Important to this theory is that populations will adopt traditional values and norms, which in many instances are religiously based, in order to provide a shared sense of purpose among their fledgling populations (Inglehart 1987). These norms then continue in a path-dependent manner, as they are fairly resistant to change, and continue to shape future cultural norms and behavior over time. As a result, materialist oriented populations almost uniformly conform to specific cultural norms and religious practices at the expense of individualism. This societal structure continues until development eventually yields widespread economic security, and new generations increasingly want to address neglected social inequity over economic growth (Inglehart 1999). Through this cycle, societal attitudes slowly transitions from collectively oriented, with mainly material interests, to individually minded, with primarily post-materialist and social interests. Unfortunately, minority and marginalized groups within materialist-oriented societies bear a significant burden in this stage of development. As a result of the entrenchment of traditional norms, citizens within areas of predominately materialist attitudes “feel threatened by foreigners, by ethnic diversity and by cultural change. This leads to an intolerance of gays and other outgroups, an insistence on traditional gender roles, and an authoritarian political outlook” (Inglehart 1999, 26).

            While past studies have shown that post-materialism can explain variation in global homophobia (Adamczyk and Pitt 2009; Anderson and Fetner 2008; Henshaw 2014; Stulhofer and Rimac 2009), can it explain why some African countries are more homophobic than others? As one of the most undeveloped areas in the world, the countries of Africa almost uniformly fit Inglehart’s description of states where societal attitudes are predominantly materialist. Accordingly, the region clings to traditional values, and has extreme, even violent, reactions to anything it sees as culturally foreign, including homosexuality. Further, the most economically developed country in the region, South Africa, has the most progressive gay-rights policies in all of Africa. There is, therefore, reasonable justification to analyze homophobia within Sub-Saharan Africa through Inglehart’s theory. To perform this analysis, several concepts previously put forth as impactful to either African homophobia or homophobia in general (including economic development, education, religiosity, and colonialism) are explored further in the context of Inglehart’s theory.

Economic Development and Societal Interests

            At the core of the post-materialistic theory is economics: as countries economically develop, their population’s interests should shift from material to social (Inglehart 1987, 1990, 1997, 1999). Interestingly, economic underdevelopment is widely thought to be a driving cause of global homophobia (Anderson and Fetner 2008; Han and O’Mahoney 2014; Wike and Horowitz 2007). This belief comes from the observation that worldwide feelings towards homosexuals are generally more negative the poorer a country, suggesting that a country’s overall economic performance may be tied to a population’s opinion of the LGBT community. Previous research has found this to be true within European countries where the prosperous region of Western Europe has far greater tolerance towards homosexuals than less developed European countries, even when controlling for former Communist rule (Anderson and Fetner 2008).

            But while economic development has been used to explain more tolerant views of homosexuality in the West, thus far, the same explanation has not been applied to clarify variations of homophobia within Sub-Saharan Africa. There is good reason to believe that both homophobic attitudes and state actions in the region can be explained through an economic lens. Since the region ranks within the world’s most underdeveloped, ubiquitous materialist attitudes would be expected within African states through Inglehart’s theory (1987). As predicted by post-materialism, African countries are both some of the poorest in the world in terms of GDP per capita (“GDP per capita” 2014), and the most homophobic overall in term of opinion surveys (Horowitz et. al. 2013; McCarthy 2014). If economic circumstances have not allowed the interests of most people to shift from material to social, individuals could be perpetuating existing homophobic cultural norms as a result of widespread materialist attitudes in the region. Underdevelopment and poverty may, therefore, be responsible for homophobic attitudes in Africa by allowing the continuation and formation of conservative cultures, which form the basis for individual’s views.

            Sub-Saharan countries, as previously noted, also have some of the harshest anti-gay policies in the world (Itaborahy and Zhu 2013). African governments may be implementing more homophobic policies in underdeveloped conditions to align with both the homophobic interests of their populations and the cultural norms of the country. Several scholars have noted how the impoverished conditions of Africa have encouraged the enactment of discriminatory policies towards gays within thriving homophobic cultures (Biruk 2014; Shoko 2010; Thoreson 2014; Van Klinken 2013). In fact it could be that underdevelopment has created a vicious cycle of discrimination in Sub-Saharan Africa, whereby widespread materialist attitudes have spurred the establishment of homophobic state structures, which have then further reinforced homophobic societal views. Overall, if underdevelopment can explain the predominance of both homophobic views and state structures in the Sub-Saharan region, materialist attitudes could reasonably be placed at the heart of African homophobia.

Education as an Avenue for Tolerance

            Inglehart suggests that a formal education can give people the ability to break down dominant cultural norms because it allows for “autonomous decision-making” (1999, 22). Education may be a way for individuals to break from homophobic cultural norms and standards, to which the rest of society adheres, especially in underdeveloped countries. In addition, as states develop, they may be able to encourage rising educational levels as more money is allowed to finance schools. Therefore, education may act in a way to reform both homophobic cultures and state institutions. There is support for this framework in other places in the world such as Ireland where greater spending on educational programs seems to have led to more tolerant attitudes towards homosexuals across the entire population (Denny, 2011).

            In Western countries, education is viewed as an essential avenue to increase societal tolerance. In fact, previous studies of developed countries have found education to be one of the strongest predictors of social tolerance towards homosexuality (Anderson and Fetner 2008). Previous research has demonstrated that individuals with a higher level of education tend to be more tolerant toward other groups, even ones that they do not like (Bobo and Licari 1989; Whitehead 2010). It seems that individuals with a greater amount of “cognitive sophistication” tend to see the worth in granting rights of expression to people different from themselves even when they do not necessarily see eye to eye (Bobo and Licari 1989). If education could be an avenue to counter discriminatory cultural norms, it could potentially be an important factor to explain homophobia in less developed places.

            Importantly for Africa, more educated Sub-Saharan countries could have greater overall tolerance for marginalized groups, including gays. Even if educational programs are not directly teaching about LGBT issues, possibly a greater “cognitive sophistication” would allow individuals to tolerate the views and lifestyles different than their own. With the extremely homophobic climate of Sub-Saharan Africa, education could possibly help to explain why some countries are less homophobic than others. While many scholars have suggested that African school systems actually worsen homophobic attitudes by labeling homosexuality as a sin (Johnson 2007; “Making Love a Crime 2013), it is difficult to tell if views are perpetuated by the schools or by the broader culture. Potentially, a person in a homophobic culture may be able to form individual beliefs only after a certain number of years in school. If education has the same effect in underdeveloped countries as it does in developed ones, it would be expected to oppose the homophobic culture of African states. When a large enough segment of the population breaks from their country’s homophobic cultural ideals, governments should reform homophobic state structures to reflect more tolerant interests. Education could therefore be a force to challenge the homophobic culture of African states.

Religion in Africa

            Religiosity has regularly been cited as a reason for the homophobic nature of countries (Asal 2013; Epprecht 2013; Shoko 2010). For instance, in a broad study of various international actors, Alexis Henshaw found that “even controlling for a country’s level of modernization and an individual respondent’s self-expression values, a respondent’s religious belief has a significant and negative relationship to their tolerance toward homosexuality.” Inglehart’s theory would suggest that religiously based conservative norms provide the moral backbone for the majority of people in societies where materialist attitudes are standard, which tends to create stigmatization of certain types of self-expression including homosexuality. In addition, religious cultural norms can be impressed on governments who create policies to reflect those ideals, thereby codifying homophobia into law (Asal 2013). However, as states develop economically, their populations rely less heavily on the conservative cultural framework for support, which allows cultural norms to secularize. Without homophobic cultural norms, governments’ incentive for discriminatory policies disappears, and state institutions correspondingly reform over time. Unfortunately, in underdeveloped regions, such as Sub-Saharan Africa, where conservative cultural norms have not been reformed, religion may continue to perpetuate discriminatory state structures and individual views.

            Religion may make a considerable impact on the level of homophobia within African states because of its importance in African culture. It has been noted that religion ties together communities and families, and plays a large role in children’s’ upbringing and education in African cultures (Johnson 2007). Importantly, African populations are often taught that homosexuality is foreign, un-African, and sinful through a religious framework (“Making Love a Crime2013). This is significant in a region where religion is a part of almost everyone’s lives. Accordingly, a recent survey found that African countries have some of the most religious populations in the world (Crabtree 2010). When asked if “religion [was] an important part of [their] daily [lives],” 85% or more of every Sub-Saharan country surveyed responded “yes” (Crabtree 2010). Religion’s ubiquity in Sub-Saharan Africa may therefore influence the development of homophobic cultural norms that are then impressed on countries’ populations and state intuitions.  

            Importantly to this conversation, Christianity and Islam, whose most accepted doctrines around the world espouse anti-homosexual rhetoric, are the two major religions in most African states and serve as the dominant moral codes. Many African states have created systems with integral ties to either Christianity or Islam, which both have generally accepted scriptural interpretations that have made gays highly stigmatized and even hated by many Africans (Shoko 2010). For example, several African countries directly use the teachings of the Qur’an, in the form of sharia law, to punish convicted homosexual activity with death by stoning. A broad survey of Sub-Saharan Africa by the Pew Research Center found that 60% of African Christians “favor making [the] Bible the official law of the land” and 63% of African Muslims “favor making sharia the official law of the land,” demonstrating the widespread influence of the region’s religious culture (Cooperman et. al. 2010). Interestingly, previous research has found Protestants, especially Evangelical Protestants, and Muslims both espouse the most negative views of homosexuals in comparison to Catholics, Jews, other religious groups and non-affiliated individuals (Adamczyk and Pitt 2009; Ogland and Verona 2014; Olson, Cadge, and Harrison 2006; Whitehead 2010). With these two groups making up the majority of religious followers in the region (Cooperman et. al. 2010; Hackett et. al. 2012, 2011), the effects of the existing homophobic culture could be compounded in many African states.

            Africa’s religious culture has also created a lack of separation between church and state in various countries, which has only exacerbated homophobia in those places. For example, in Uganda the integral relationship between religion, government, and general homophobia was painfully felt with the introduction of the Anti-Homosexuality Act to the country’s legislature in 2009 (Epprecht 2013, 144-145). The country’s government was convinced to introduce the law, known as the ‘Kill the Gays Bill’ because its maximum penalty for homosexuality was death, by missionaries Scott Lively and Don Schmierer who both toured across Uganda preaching about the gays’ “dark agenda” (Epprecht 2013, 144-145). The instant and overwhelming enthusiasm for the bill by the general population not only illustrated how deeply rooted religion was in the cultural fabric of the country, but also demonstrated how those norms have shaped people’s views of homosexuality. If a connection exists between Africa’s religious cultures and regional homophobia it is easy to see how both laws and attitudes could take on a discriminatory tone.

 

 

Hypotheses

            With the above discussion in mind, I formulate several hypotheses about the role of economics, education, religion, and colonial rule on institutional and personal homophobia. My predictions follow the principles set out by Inglehart’s post-materialist theory; namely homophobia should proliferate in economically underdeveloped African states, which abide by religiously rooted traditional values. The homophobic systems of Africa should have been built upon the colonial past, which started many homophobic norms. In addition, education should be a way for African states to increase individual thought and decrease cultural homophobia. Through this framework institutional and personal homophobia should have the same underlying causes, as both came out of the same African historical legacy, and should be driven by the framework outlined by post-materialism.

            The Sub-Saharan region is concurrently the poorest in the world (“GDP per capita” 2014), and also the harshest in terms of homophobic laws (Itaborahy and Zhu 2013). This is partly explained by the fact that structural changes are costly for societies as path-dependence would suggest (Asal 2013), and therefore changing old homophobic legal frameworks taken from previous decades may be difficult for poor countries. But economic underdevelopment also plays a critical role by both bolstering conservative cultural norms, which reinforce negative social attitudes and discriminatory institutions. Opinion surveys have consistently shown Sub-Saharan countries as the most disapproving of homosexuality of any area surveyed in the world (Horowitz et. al. 2013; McCarthy 2014). However it remains to be seen if there is a relationship between homophobic attitudes and economic development specifically within Sub-Saharan countries.

  • Hypothesis 1: Economic development is negatively correlated with institutional homophobia in Sub-Saharan Africa.
  • Hypothesis 2: Economic development is negatively correlated with the personal homophobia in Sub-Saharan Africa.

            Inglehart suggests that education can help individuals distance their thinking from traditional cultural norms (1999), and therefore change dominant cultural values over time. This is supported by other studies, which have found that education increases individual’s tolerance towards homosexuals (Bobo and Licari 1989). Possibly an ability to view the world from different perspectives allows people with more education to see the value in giving freedoms, such as expression, to others even when they do not like them. Likely, greater levels of education allow citizens to learn about other groups in society through a more objective lens. In Sub-Saharan Africa, countries with the economic stability to finance educational institutions may have more tolerant attitudes and institutions within their states as a result of more educated populations.

  • Hypothesis 3: The overall educational level of a country is negatively correlated with institutional homophobia in Sub-Saharan Africa.
  • Hypothesis 4: The overall educational level of a country is negatively correlated with personal homophobia in Sub-Saharan Africa.

            Most African countries have norms and legal institutions based on religious teachings. This would be expected of states where materialist attitudes dominate because they tend to have populations who follow conservative overarching cultural norms (Inglehart 1999). Islam and Christianity, the two major religions in Africa, both largely view homosexuality as a moral sin. If the cultural frameworks of states rely heavily on these teachings, populations should be more radicalized in their dislike of homosexuality, and African government institutions should concurrently take harder stances against homosexuality (Epprecht, 2013).

  • Hypothesis 5: The religiosity of a country is positively correlated with institutional homophobia in Sub-Saharan Africa.
  • Hypothesis 6: The religiosity of a country is positively correlated with personal homophobia in Sub-Saharan Africa.

            The British have been accused of initiating the homophobic nature of their former landholdings with the discriminatory laws they instituted into those places (Asal 2013; Gupta 2008; Han and O’Mahoney 2014; Ireland 2013; Itaborahy and Zhu 2013; “Making Love a Crime” 2013; Sanders 2009). Accordingly, as a result of path-dependence, the effects of colonialism should reflect on the current norms of former British colonies by having more discriminatory attitudes and institutions within those states.

  • Hypothesis 7: Being a former British colony is positively correlated to institutional homophobia in Sub-Saharan Africa.
  • Hypothesis 8: Being a former British colony is positively correlated to personal homophobia in Sub-Saharan Africa.  

Measurements and Methods

The Need for a Better Indicator         

            To date, a considerable portion of the research that has been done on homophobia in Africa has focused on the criminalization of homosexuality (Asal 2013; Itaborahy and Zhu 2013; “Making Love a Crime” 2013). Unfortunately, this fails to show the true variation in the degree of homophobia felt in Sub-Saharan African countries. Recently, Gallup compiled a worldwide survey, which asked: “Is the city or area where you live in a good place or not a good place to live for gay or lesbian people?” (McCarthy 2013). Places such as Benin, Chad, and Gabon overwhelming said their country was a bad place, 91%, 94%, 95% respectively, for gay people to live (McCarthy 2013) even though those countries have no laws banning homosexuality. Angola and Botswana, which have up to three and seven year prison terms respectively, for homosexual acts, had two of the highest percentages of people agreeing that their countries were a good place for gays to live (McCarthy 2013).

            Many of the discriminatory legal systems were instituted over a century ago and therefore may not accurately represent the true nature of homophobia in their countries. Some African laws were likely too expensive for the underdeveloped states to change and therefore remained through the years even if they did not reflect broad societal interests (Asal 2013). This is apparent in many Sub-Saharan countries, such as Sierra Leone and Angola, where harsh sentences for homosexual acts exist, but the states have never actually prosecuted individuals under the laws. Both Angola’s and Sierra Leone’s anti-gay laws have not been updated since the 1800s suggesting that they are less homophobic than they appear when only measuring homophobia by the severity of the existing legal system. Unfortunately, the narrow view of homophobia looked at through the lens of criminalization fails to account for the multifaceted nature of homophobia.

Operationalizing Homophobia

            As a result of the inadequacies of using criminalization as an indicator of homophobia, this study divides homophobia into the categories of institutional and personal in order to more accurately operationalize the term. As stated previously, institutional homophobia is the discrimination or exclusion of homosexuals in society through structurally-sanctioned means. In this context, institutional homophobia is anti-gay discrimination perpetuated by African state institutions and organizations. Personal homophobia, on the other hand, is the social stigma of homosexuality held by the population of a state. In this case, intolerance emanates from socially held biases and views of collective groups of African individuals. By utilizing these two terms this analysis attempts to take a holistic view of homosexuality that was not previously attainable when defining homophobia by the severity of anti-gay laws. The two terms are investigated side by side in order to illustrate both of their individual and underlying causes. Both are utilized in this study because the causes of an institutionalized system and the social stigmas held by the general public are likely quite divergent. Conceptualizing homophobia at the micro and macro-level helps to conceptualize the term by giving two sides of homophobia simultaneously. 

            Homophobia was operationalized using two composite scores. The institutional homophobia score was created using several questions that conferred the amount of structural discrimination towards homosexuals in a specific country. The composite score includes, on the one hand, the current status of laws regarding homosexuality, and, on the other, the amount of homophobic persecution allowed by the state. Personal homophobia was quantified using a composite score of various surveys from the last 10 years asking respondents how they felt about homosexuality. This allows for a variety of countries within the Sub-Saharan region to be analyzed, which gives a clearer picture of population’s feeling regarding homosexuality. Table A1 gives a description and statistics about the various variables utilized within the study (see appendix A). Table A2 shows the state-level data collected for the 49 Sub-Saharan countries (see appendix A).

Institutional Homophobia Dependent Variable         

            The institutional homophobia dependent variable attempts to capture the degree to which societal institutions persecuted homosexuals. To quantify this measure several yes or no questions were asked to gauge the level of a country’s institutional homophobia. The questions were set up so that one point was awarded if the answer to the question was “yes” and zero if the answer was “no.” After points had been designated, they were added to give a final score. A greater score indicates a greater degree of structural discrimination towards gays, and questions were set up so that answering “yes” to any question conferred a higher homophobia score. One component of the score included the severity of laws regarding homosexuality (ranging from the death penalty to legalized gay marriage), [2] and the other sought to capture a greater breadth of institutional homophobia’s meaning through questions directed at structural discrimination or inequality within societies.

            The questions making up the portion of the Institutional homophobia score demonstrating the severity of homophobic laws include: Does the country have the death penalty for homosexual behavior? Is there life imprisonment for homosexual behavior? Does the penalty for homosexual activity range from 10 to 100 years? Does the penalty for homosexual activity range from 1 month to 9 years? Is homosexuality illegal within the country in some form? Is gay marriage illegal within the country? Have anti-homosexuality laws been updated since 1950?[3] Is the government or other organizations legally allowed to discriminate against gays? Has anyone ever been arrested for homosexual activity? Has anyone been prosecuted for homosexual activity?[4]

            The questions making up the second part of the Institutional Homophobia score include: Is the state involved in violence against LGBT individuals? Is there a lack of LGBT organizations within the country? Has the state discriminated against or interfered with LGBT organizations? Has the state prevented open demonstrations of support for LGBT issues within the country? [5] Is there a lack of support for homosexuals from individuals in a position of power within the country, including the current leader? [6]

            The institutional homophobia variable ranges from 1 at the low end of the homophobic spectrum to 14 at the high end (Table 1). The data’s mean of just over around 8.6 shows that the countries are skewed towards being more institutionally homophobic.

Table 1: Institutional Homophobia Variable Statistics

Variable

Description

Mean

Std. Dev.

Max

Min

Institutional Homophobia Score

Composite score demonstrating the level of institutional discrimination towards homosexuals within a country.

8.571

3.048

14

1

            Potential drawbacks of the variable include the limited availability of information for African countries and inaccuracies of the weight given to particular components of the score. In terms of Sub-Saharan Africa, there is always a question as to the reliability of information. Many instances of violence and persecution go unreported in countries with weak policing infrastructures and few credible news agencies. Especially in terms of the LGBT community, the degree of repression can be difficult to determine. This was the reasoning behind making the measure from multiple questions in order to possibly eliminate inaccuracies of the score given to any one question. Taking the vast majority of the data from either Itaborahy and Zhu’s report on worldwide anti-homosexuality laws or the U.S. State Department’s Country Reports on Human Rights Practices also makes the scoring information more credible and consistent. But even so, invariably some countries will have somewhat skewed scores based on missing or inaccurate information, but unfortunately this problem is difficult to avoid. The other difficulty to consider is that every question is given the same weight in the score. It is possible that some aspects should contribute more when quantifying institutionalized discrimination, but doing this only adds more subjectivity to the score. For this reason each question was weighted equally.

Personal Homophobia Dependent Variable

            Personal homophobia sought to capture the level of socially held anti-homosexual stigma held by the populations of various African nations. It was quantified using eight opinion surveys that all asked respondents about their feelings regarding homosexuality. The surveys were taken from Gallup, the Pew Research Center, and the World Values Survey.[7] Each survey was given an individual score according to country by dividing the percent of total respondents showing dislike for homosexuality by the same number added to the total percent of respondents showing positive views of homosexuality. In order to get easier numbers to utilize the results were multiplied by 100.

Personal Homophobia Score = (a)/(a + b) * 100  [8]

This effectively eliminated the percent of respondents who gave an answer along the lines of “don’t know” for which it is impossible to infer the true meaning. Each county’s score was averaged across the surveys, in order to get a single score for each country. The surveys ranged from the years 2003 to 2013 in order to include as many countries in the analysis as possible. It is both assumed that attitudes remained fairly constant during this time frame and that the questions asked were measuring the same thing, which is reasonable because a comparison of scores for identical countries showed a high degree of agreement across all surveys included. A high personal homophobia scores indicates a greater social rejection of homosexuality across a given population. The personal homophobia score ranges from around 59 to 96 (Table 2). The scores mean is around 90, which is considerably skewed towards the upper bound of the data. This reflects the overall negative attitude felt about homosexuality by the majority of Sub-Saharan populations.

            The principle disadvantage of the personal homophobia variable comes from inaccuracies after averaging multiple surveys into one score. These surveys come from different years and ask varying questions. It is possible that while the questions asked were similar across surveys, they were not all investigating the same issue. In addition, the percentage of people having either a favorable or unfavorable view of homosexuality fluctuates from year to year, which could result in an unrealistic averaged score. Having said this, a high correlation between related country scores across surveys makes it far less likely that questions demonstrate vastly different issues or that there has been a dramatic change is opinions regarding homosexuality in the last several years. Therefore, these potential hurdles do not appear to be major problems when drawing meaningful conclusions from the variable.

Table 2: Personal Homophobia Statistics Summary

Variable

Description

Mean

Std. Dev.

Max

Min

Personal Homophobia Score

Composite survey score reflecting the percent of a country’s population who disproves of homosexuality.

88.82

7.857

95.592

58.971

            It is worth mentioning that the two variables for homophobia are related by a Pearson correlation coefficient (r) of 0.625. This suggests that they may influence one another, although the relationship between the two is difficult to define. It is important to recognize that African societies with high levels of homophobic views tend to also have state structures that are strongly discriminatory towards gays. However, the analyses in this paper will not focus on the relationship between the two dependent variables, although one may exist.

Independent Variables

            GDP per capita, PPP was used as proxy for economic development (see Table A1 for details). The measure was used instead of GDP per capita to account for variations in cost within different domestic markets. The gross domestic product effectively demonstrates the size of a country’s economy by measuring the total value of goods produced in the country within the year. By using GDP per capita, a fair approximation of a country’s relative economic performance can be demonstrated, which can be compared to other countries regardless of population size. One downside is that countries with a single lucrative industry, but with few tangible jobs, can give an inflated GDP per capita, which does not represent the country’s overreaching economic development. GDP per capita, PPP was taken from the World Bank from 2014.

            To measure the overall level of education within a country, the mean years of schooling from the HDI score was utilized. This indicator was used because more years of school across a population on average would be expected to demonstrate a more educated population overall. A drawback of the variable is that it does not show the quality of the populace’s education. For the purposes of this study, it is assumed that populations with more years of schooling also have received a better education overall than other populations with less average years of education.

            A measure of religiosity was difficult to determine by country. Not enough information was available to find the degree of religious adherence for most populations of Sub-Saharan countries. Studies normally rely on measures of individuals rate of church attendance or personal belief in God, but unfortunately this type of data is lacking for Africa. For this reason another measure of religiosity was used. Instead of religious commitment, the percent of a population who placed themselves in the “unaffiliated” category in religious identification surveys was used as a proxy for the degree of secularity within a country. In the surveys, respondents were given the choice to identify with one of the major world religions, a folk religion, the “unaffiliated” category, or an unlisted religion. For the purposes of this study, I am defining religiously unaffiliated respondents as non-religious. Therefore I am characterizing countries with more non-religious or unaffiliated individuals as more secular and less religious overall. By doing this, I am assuming that the percent of the population identifying as unaffiliated is inversely related to the relative religiosity of a country. Admittedly, this is not a perfect indicator, but on the whole it appears to be a sensible measure of a state’s secular nature. In the following analysis the religiosity of a country will be approximated using the inverse value of the religiously unaffiliated percentage of a population. The percentage of unaffiliated was taken from Hackett, Grim, and Cooperman’s report on the global religious landscape.

            To measure the effect of colonial influence I use nominal dummy variables to account for the identity of colonizing countries. Since Britain and France were the two main colonizers, and had very different approaches in terms of the treatment of homosexuals in their landholdings, I compare them to all other former African colonizers as a baseline. Other colonizers include Portugal, Spain, Germany, Belgium, and Italy. The former colonizers of modern day Sub-Saharan countries were identified based on the European country controlling the majority of the territory directly before the country gained independence. I decided to assign colonizers in this fashion because the country last in control most likely set the anti-gay policies in the territory before independence. The identity of the former colonizers was taken form the U.N.’s report on colonial landholdings (“Trust and Non-Self-Governing” 1999).

            Other controls were also utilized for the state-level of analysis, which have been included in similar analyses (Anderson and Fetner 2008; Han and O’Mahoney 2014; Henshaw 2014; Stulhofer and Rimac 2009). One is regime type; it has been suggested that countries with democratic governments may have less repressive state structures towards homosexuals because of the voice given to minorities in democratic systems (Han and O’Mahoney 2014). Polity scores were used to approximate regime type (Marshall 2014). [9]  The polity score ranges from 10 to -10, where a score of 6 to 10 is defined as a democracy, 5 to -5 as an anocracy, and -6 to -10 as an autocracy. Another necessary control in any study of Africa is ethnic fractionalization because of the large number of ethnic groups present in Sub-Saharan Africa. It is important to show that the phenomenon being investigated is not explained by the region’s ethnic landscape. Alberto Alesina’s measure of ethnic fractionalization was used as a control because it encompassed the greatest number of African countries (Han and O’Mahoney 2014). In addition, studies have found varying ages within populations to be an important predictor of homophobic attitudes (Anderson and Fetner 2008; Stulhofer and Rimac 2009). In developed countries, it has been observed that younger people tend to be more tolerant of homosexuality than older individuals, which is generally attributed to changes in social norms regarding homosexuality over different generations (Inglehart 1990). This may not be true of the younger generation in Africa since social norms have been extremely anti-gay (Albright 2003; McCarthy, 2014). It is also conceivable that younger populations, which are generally more politically active, may be seeking homophobic governmental policies and actions. This analysis employs the median age of a country’s population from the CIA’s World Factbook to control for the possibility that the age distribution within a country affects opinions about gays and the level of discriminatory actions by state institutions.

Country-Level Results

            Several regression models are employed in order to predict variations in institutional and personal homophobia scores. Incremental building of the models is used to individually examine independent variables. Institutional and personal homophobia are both analyzed in almost identical respects, and the framework of incrementally building models is the same for both dependent variables. Models 1, 2, and 3 all isolate singular independent variables and employ bivariate regression models. Models 4, 5, and 6 gradually add more variables and controls in order to see if relationships between variables hold across different models.

            Model 1 (addressing hypothesis 1 and 2) examines the effect of GDP per capita, PPP, model 2 looks at education (addressing hypothesis 3 and 4), model 3 (addressing hypothesis 5 and 6) illustrates the effect of religiosity, and model 6 (addressing hypothesis 7 and 8) investigates the influence of colonial rule. Model 6 uses the identity of the former colonizing countries before independence as dummy variables. This allows the nominal criteria of either being a British or French former colony to be used as an independent variable in the analysis. The baseline is countries formerly controlled by countries other than the French or British. Model 4 utilizes the first multivariate regression to compare all of the continuous independent variables. Model 5 adds controls to the models including the median age of the population, ethnic fractionalization, and country polity scores.  

The Causes of Institutional Homophobia

            Table 3, which illustrates the regression models created for institutionalized homophobia, shows tentative support for Inglehart’s theory (1999). The driving force of post-materialism, economic development (modeled using GDP per capita, PPP), illustrates a significant negative correlation through almost every model. The negative relationship supports hypothesis 1 and suggests, as expected, that wealthier Sub-Saharan countries tend to have less discriminatory state institutions. The relationship seems to support Inglehart’s prediction that economic development allows states to adopt more socially progressive institutions even within the generally homophobic states of Africa. The relationship holds through almost every model, demonstrating the importance of the variable. Only in Model 6 does GDP per capita, PPP fail to produce

significant results, which could be a result of the number of controls used for the relatively small sample size. The number of Sub-Saharan countries with similarly small GDP values also seems to have potentially inhibited a more robust relationship with the institutional homophobia score.

            One of the most striking results of the analysis is religiosity’s strong and positive correlation through every model. The relationship suggests that more religious African societies will have correspondingly more discriminatory state institutions, which lends credence to hypothesis 5. In states where materialist attitudes are common, societal institutions should reflect the interests of dominant religious norms (Inglehart 1999), and this should be reflected in African societies where religious doctrine generally encourage anti-gay ideologies. By itself, religiosity predicts around a quarter of the variance (its beta coefficient is 0.440 compared to all other variables in the sixth model), which implies that African countries have developed discriminatory institutions partially as a result of religious influences. However, the predictive ability of the variable also indicates that religion does not tell the whole story. It is difficult to tell if there are any outliers in the analysis (Figure 1) because many of the countries have very high religiosity scores, which makes it difficult to determine if groups of countries are deviating from their predicted values.  

Table 3: Regression Models for Institutional Homophobia (Standard Error in Parenthesis)

Factor

Model 1

Model 2

Model 3

Model 4

Model 5

Model 6

GDP Per Capita, PPP (000’s of US$)

-0.149* (0.061)

--------

--------

-0.185** (0.067)

-0.162* (0.063)

-0.112 (0.066)

Education (in Years)

--------

-0.153 (0.210)

--------

0.514* (0.067)

0.937*** (0.220)

0.600* (0.280)

Religiosity

--------

--------

0.324*** (0.081)

0.323*** (0.085)

0.333*** (0.078)

0.280** (0.079)

Polity Index

--------

--------

--------

--------

-0.109 (0.068)

-0.109 (0.065)

Median Age (in Years)

--------

--------

--------

--------

-0.503** (0.134)

-0.501*** (0.129)

Ethnic Fractionalization

--------

--------

--------

--------

-0.699 (1.501)

-0.831 (1.456)

UK

--------

--------

--------

--------

--------

2.092* (1.011)

France

--------

--------

--------

--------

--------

0.645 (0.861)

Other Colonizers

--------

--------

--------

--------

--------

Baseline

Constant

9.177*** (0.504)

9.130*** (1.064)

-20.803* (7.838)

-24.062** (8.610)

-16.432* (7.957)

-11.086 (8.051)

N

48

47

49

47

45

45

R-Squared

0.114

0.012

0.231

0.344

0.573

0.624

*P-Value < 0.05, **P-Value < 0.01, ***P-Value < 0.001     

Figure 1: Regression of Institutional Homophobia vs. Religiosity
 

            Throughout most of the models, education appears to be a significant predictor of institutional homophobia. Only in model 2 does the variable not show a significant relationship. In the rest of the models, education has a fairly large (with a beta coefficient of 0.414 in the sixth model) and positive relationship, suggesting that African populations with more years of schooling, on average, live in places with more homophobic state structures (contradicting hypothesis 3). It is therefore possible that African school systems are actually reinforcing discriminatory cultures within the region. It seems strange that education’s significance varies so much throughout the models, which leads one to believe that the variable’s significance may be masked by other factors. In a separate analysis (not published), I find that the variable becomes especially significant with the addition of the median age variable. Possibly the relationship between institutional homophobia and a country’s average educational level differs depending on the country’s age distribution. It could be that in places with a younger population, the educational system can actually reinforce the country’s homophobic culture to a greater degree because of the greater number of people likely enrolled in school. Interestingly, the education variable only becomes significant with the addition of the GDP per capita and religiosity variables. It seems conceivable that education could reinforce homophobia in both more religious settings and economically less developed countries.

            As described by previous studies (Asal 2013; Han and O’Mahoney 2014; Ireland 2013; Sanders 2009), the type of former colonizer has a significant impact on contemporary homophobia. Countries formally ruled by the UK show a positive relationship compared to Portuguese, Spanish, German, Belgian, and Italian colonized countries, which supports hypothesis 7. The variable’s beta coefficient is fairly large at 0.343 (in the sixth model), showing that type of colonial influence makes quite a difference in the structure of African states. This falls in line with the model of path-dependence, posed by Inglehart, where culturally historic practices are reflected in states’ unique paths of development (1999). This suggests that, overall, former colonies of the UK have developed more homophobic institutions, compared to countries with other colonial influences, because the British introduced homophobic colonial laws. An interesting conclusion is that British colonies have actually continued more discriminatory systems partially because their former colonizer originally planted the homophobic seed. In contrast, former colonies of the French show no meaningful difference in the level of institutional homophobia compared to countries colonized by other European powers.

            It is interesting to notice that median age of a country was also an important negative predictor in the analysis. The relationship suggests that countries with younger populations on average have more homophobic systems. This could imply that younger populations within Africa are pushing for discriminatory institutions. Importantly, Inglehart’s theory depends on younger generations to drive changing societal interests during the course of population turnover (1987). With economic development, generational changes in Western societies have made social issues increasingly important. However, in countries where the culture indoctrinates homophobic ideals, population turnover may actually reinforce those ideals, and this seems to be reflected in African states’ institutions.

The Cause of Personal Homophobia 

            Table 4 illustrates the regression models developed for the analysis of personal homophobia. Interestingly, the initial results show a marked difference from the analysis of institutional homophobia. With the addition of controls, only the type of colonial rule and the average age of the country show significance. In model 5, religiosity approaches the level significant with a P>|t | score of 0.053, but this relationship doesn’t hold up in the subsequent models. Importantly for this analysis, Inglehart’s theory does not seem to hold weight since GDP and economic development do not have a relationship with personal homophobia.  However, upon closer inspection of model 1, there appears to be an outlier country, which has a significant effect on the results (Figure 2). The models seem to be skewed by Gabon whose GDP per capita is one of the highest in Sub-Saharan Africa. The country has a small population of slightly over 1.5 million (“Population, total” 2014), and derives its wealth primarily from oil exports. As with most oil exporters, Gabon’s substantial petroleum revenue appears to be concentrated in the hands of a select few, which makes its GDP per capita artificially high, especially for the underdeveloped region (see Table A2 for information on the regions GDPs per capita). Overall, the country’s population remains extremely poor and lives in economically difficult conditions. Consistent with Inglehart’s theory the majority of the population seems to have very negative views of homosexuals, but the inflated GDP per capita impedes an investigation into a possible relationship. The country was therefore omitted and the models were reanalyzed (Figure 3).

 

 

Table 4: Regression Models for Personal Homophobia (Standard Error in Parenthesis)

Factor

Model 1

Model 2

Model 3

Model 4

Model 5

Model 6

GDP Per Capita, PPP (in 000’s of US$)

-0.876** (0.285)

--------

--------

-0.518 (0.377)

-0.456, (0.367)

-0.553 (0.356)

Education (in Years)

--------

-1.452* (0.606)

--------

-0.012  (0.775)

0.750   (0.849)

0.872 (1.018)

Religiosity

--------

--------

0.808** (0.234)

0.577       (0.286)

0.321   (.302)

0.236 (0.292)

Polity Index

--------

--------

--------

--------

-0.081 (0.290)

-0.051 (0.301)

Median Age (in Years)

--------

--------

--------

--------

-1.649     (0.842)

-1.919* (0.788)

Ethnic Fractionalization

--------

--------

--------

--------

4.560 (6.752)

1.467 (6.399)

UK

--------

--------

--------

--------

--------

4.579 (4.186)

France

--------

--------

--------

--------

--------

7.572* (3.087)

Other Colonizers

--------

--------

--------

--------

--------

Baseline

Constant

91.911*** (1.589)

95.407*** (3.039)

11.502 (22.458)

35.551 (28.901)

83.856* (36.511)

93.804* (34.923)

N

32

32

32

32

32

32

R-Squared

0.240

0.161

0.284

0.346

0.451

0.569

*P-Value < 0.05, **P-Value < 0.01, ***P-Value < 0.001

            Table 5 depicts this revised analysis with the dropped variable, and the results are surprising. With one less country in the analysis, GDP per capita becomes highly significant in every model (with a large beta coefficient of -0.771 compared to all other variables in the sixth model). The variable shows a negative correlation with personal homophobia, in support of hypothesis 2 (Figure 3), which means that higher GDP per capita African countries tend to have lower levels of discriminatory views within their populations. This falls squarely in line with the post-materialist explanation by supporting the notion that economic development is at the backbone of homophobic views. Dropping Gabon allows GDP per capita to explain far more in the model than it had before. In the previous analysis, GDP per capita explained about a quarter of the variance in personal homophobia. With the dropped variable, GDP per capita can explain almost two-thirds of the variance. The vast difference in the two analyses is due to the small number of countries included. With an N of only 32 to begin with, the model can be radically changed with the omission of one country. For this reason, an individual-level of analysis of the fifth and sixth wave of the World Values Survey was performed later in this study, to corroborate the results of state-level analysis.  

Table 5: Regression Models for Personal Homophobia with the Dropped Variable (Standard Error in Parenthesis)

Factor

Model 1

Model 2

Model 3

Model 4

Model 5

Model 6

GDP Per Capita, PPP (in 000’s of US$)

-1.823*** (0.272)

--------

--------

-1.948*** (0.323)

-1.792** (0.471)

-1.803*** (0.415)

Education (in years)

--------

-1.674* (0.612)

--------

0.626 (0.608)

0.843 (0.693)

0.184 (0.807)

Religiosity

--------

--------

0.820** (0.234)

0.145    (0.238)

0.074    (0.255)

-0.098 (0.241)

Polity Index

--------

--------

--------

--------

-0.046    (0.237)

-0.182 (0.235)

Median Age (in Years)

--------

--------

--------

--------

-0.601  (0.744)

-0.699 (0.681)

Ethnic Fractionalization

--------

--------

--------

--------

3.269 (5.523)

-0.178 (4.977)

UK

--------

--------

--------

--------

--------

8.155* (3.363)

France

--------

--------

--------

--------

--------

6.952** (2.398)

Other Colonizers

--------

--------

--------

--------

--------

Baseline

Constant

94.125*** (1.222)

96.062*** (3.008)

10.209 (22.424)

77.870** (23.912)

92.123** (29.123)

117.128** (27.370)

N

31

31

31

31

31

31

R-Squared

0.607

0.205

0.297

0.625

0.641

0.747

*P-Value < 0.05, **P-Value < 0.01, ***P-Value < 0.001

 

 

Figure 2: Regression of Personal Homophobia vs. GDP Per Capita, PPP

Figure 3: Regression of Personal Homophobia vs. GDP Per Capita, PPP with Dropped Variable

            

            It is interesting that neither education nor religiosity shows a robust relationship in this analysis. In the bivariate regression models, both education and religiosity have a significant relationship to personal homophobia, but these correlations fades in subsequent models. It is interesting to notice the near significance of religiosity in the first analysis of personal homophobia, and its complete absence in the revised one. Moreover, Inglehart’s theory would lead one to believe that religiosity should play a major role in the development of materialist beliefs in underdeveloped societies (1999). Economic development’s overwhelmingly strong relationship raises the possibility that smaller relationships are hiding in the analysis. With the information given thus far, neither hypothesis 4 or 6 can be accepted or denied, but an individual-level investigation of the World Values Survey is provided to corroborate these results.

            The difference between the original and subsequent analyses is also intriguing. Originally, median age showed an important negative relationship, which would suggest that countries with younger populations tend to have populations with more negative views of gays. This would seem to reflect the logic put forth by Inglehart whereby the younger generation is driving societal interests in Africa in a more conservative direction and would also support the results found in the analysis of institutional homophobia. In African societies, where homophobic views are the norm, it would be expected that populations composed mainly of a young, impressionable generation would reflect the homophobic norms that they grew up with. The first analysis on personal homophobia seems to support this notion with a significant negative relationship. However, the relationship disappears in the second analysis, which makes the true relationship less clear. 

            The first analysis also shows a positive relationship between colonies of the French and personal homophobia compared to other colonizers, which would suggest that African countries with French colonial influence actually have more homophobic views overall. This appears to contradict hypothesis 8, as well as discredit the notion that homophobic views in Africa originated from colonial laws introduced by the British. However, in the updated analysis, former colonies of the British and French have positive correlations with personal homophobia. The coefficients of both variables are surprisingly large with a beta coefficient of 0.511 for the British variable and 0.441 for the French variable coefficient (in the sixth model). In view of this, influence from both colonizers may have had a lasting impact on the development of homophobic views to the present day.

Individual-Level Results

Individual-Level Methods

            To corroborate the results of the state-level analysis, and to shed light on the true causal relationship of various factors on personal homophobia in Sub-Saharan Africa, an individual-level investigation was done using the fifth and sixth waves of the World Values Survey. The fifth wave of the survey was done during the period of 2005 to 2009 and the sixth wave was conducted from 2010 to 2014. This report used only countries in the two waves of the World Values Surveys from the region of Sub-Saharan Africa. The summary statistics for these seven countries and the variables used are available in tables B1 and B2 (see appendix B). The purpose of this additional analysis was to see if relationships posed at the state-level hold up at the individual-level. This aims to avoid the individualistic fallacy, whereby state-level phenomenon are inferred to be the result of aggregated individual actions or interests even when a causal link is not made at the micro-level (Seligson 2002). This is especially important when using Inglehart’s theory, which justifies changes in populations’ interests from material to social on changing lifestyles of individuals. It was recognized in this study that a spurious relationship was possible when casual relationships between state-level variables and individual homophobic views are assumed to be true without individual-level data. Therefore the World Values Survey data was used to back up the claims made at the state-level.

            Personal homophobia was measured using questions from the surveys that ranked the respondent’s view of homosexuality on a 1-10 scale, with 10 denoting homosexuality as always justifiable and 1 as never justifiable. This scale gave a measure of tolerance, which is the inverse of the dependent variables used thus far. To fit the format of the rest of this study, all answers were multiplied by -1 in order to give a measure of homophobia, which serves as the dependent variable.

            Several individual-level variables are incorporated from questions in the World Value Survey, which reflect independent variables used in the previous analysis. Income was measured using questions that asked respondents to place their household revenue on a scale from 1-10, with 10 being the highest in society and 1 the lowest.[10] The educational level was quantified using a survey scale from 1-9, with each subsequent point representing a higher educational level attained by the respondent.[11] Religiosity was approximated using questions that asked respondents how important God was in their lives on a scale from 1-10, with 10 being highest and 1 lowest.[12]

            To test Inglehart’s theory of state-level economic development GDP per capita, PPP was utilized. Each respondent was assigned a GDP per capita value corresponding to the year his or her country was surveyed. All GDP per capita values were taken from the World Bank. This study clustered the data around country type in order to standardize individual responses by the country that they originated from. Since only seven countries were represented in the surveys, not many state-level variables could be included. For this reason, neither polity score nor ethnic fractionalization were utilized in the study. In addition, all but two of the countries in the surveys were former British colonies, and none were French, so dummy variables for former colonizer were not included.

            Age[13] and gender[14] of the respondent, along with religious denomination, were used as controls, which mirrors similar individual-level studies (Anderson and Fetner 2008; Henshaw 2014; Stulhofer and Rimac 2009). Dummy variables for religious denomination were created to see if one type of religious group mattered more than another.[15] Separate dummy variables were created for Protestants, Roman Catholics, Orthodox, Muslims, and other religions (as a baseline). These denominations were selected because they represent the largest religious groups in the Sub-Saharan region (Cooperman et. al. 2010; Hackett et. al. 2012, 2011).

 Individual-Level Findings

            Table 6 shows the results of the individual-level analysis of the Sub-Saharan countries within the fifth and sixth wave of the World Values survey. Interestingly, the results present nearly an identical picture to the state-level analysis done previously. Even while controlling for the socioeconomic status of individuals, the GDP per capita of the country in which the person resides, has the ability to predict homophobic views. The negative correlation gives evidence that individuals residing in more economically developed countries will have less homophobic views compared to others in similar socioeconomic conditions within less developed countries. In light of this, economic underdevelopment is likely an important driver of the larger homophobic cultural views within African states. This seems to fit into a post-materialistic framework where economic development influences cultural norms, which impinge negative views of homosexuality onto the population.

            The analyses also show that income, religiosity, as well as religious denomination seem to have standalone effects on people’s views outside of the states economic development, although their r-squared values seems to imply that these effects are less significant. Income’s negative correlation illustrates that poorer people tend to hold more discriminatory attitudes towards homosexuals. It would appear that while statewide economic development can shift society’s view of homosexuality, socio-economic status can also change the views of individuals within Africa. This matches the results of other studies that have investigated the connection between income and homophobia (Anderson and Fetner 2008).

Table 6: World Value Survey Individual-Level Regressions for Personal Homophobia (Standard Error in Parenthesis)[16]

Factor

Model 1

Model 2

Model 3

Model 4

GDP Per Capita, PPP (000's of US$)

--------

-0.213*** (0.012)

-0.217*** (0.0125)

-0.209*** (0.015)

Income

-0.11* (0.041)

-0.128* (0.048)

-0.128* (0.048)

-0.129* (0.049)

Education

-0.141 (0.062)

0.002 (0.019)

0.010 (0.021)

0.011 (0.020)

Religiosity

0.244 (0.112)

0.153* (0.056)

0.152* (0.055)

0.142* (0.053)

Age (in Years)

--------

--------

0.006 (0.004)

0.007 (0.003)

Sex

--------

--------

-0.085 (0.050)

-0.091 (0.054)

Protestant

--------

--------

--------

0.242* (0.073)

Catholic

--------

--------

--------

0.027 (0.080)

Orthodox

--------

--------

--------

0.260 (0.127)

Muslim

--------

--------

--------

0.426 (0.254)

Other Religion

--------

--------

--------

Baseline

N

17773

17773

17772

17735

Constant

-3.409* (1.110)

-2.034** (0.377)

-2.125** (0.379)

-2.232** (0.362)

R-Squared

0.075

0.217

0.218

0.222

*P-Value < 0.05, **P-Value < 0.01, ***P-Value < 0.001     

            An investigation of religiosity was also interesting because the results from the previous analysis of personal homophobia were inconclusive. While the term was on the level of significance in the original models of personal homophobia, the updated analysis no longer showed a role for religiosity. Religiosity’s significance was likely not apparent in the previous analysis because of the dominant role of the GDP per capita variable, or because of the small sample size. Additionally, the important role of religiosity in the institutional homophobia models would make it surprising that the variable plays no role in personal homophobia. The individual-level analysis is useful to look at relationships that were not apparent at the state-level. Intriguingly, religiosity shows significance in almost all models with a positive correlation, further demonstrating that there is a relationship between religiosity and homophobic views. It is also interesting that religiosity only becomes significant in the models after the addition of GDP per capita, which might suggest that the relationship between homophobic views and religiosity is different at various levels of economic development. This would make sense under Inglehart’s theory where religious cultural norms change as states go through stages of development (1999).

            Another interesting result coming from table 6 is the significance of the Protestant dummy variable compared to the other religions. The relationship to homophobic views is positive, meaning that Protestants tend to be more homophobic compared to other denominations. Several studies have noted that Protestants tend to be more homophobic overall compared to other religious denominations (Adamczyk and Pitt 2009; Ogland and Verona 2014; Olson, Cadge, and Harrison 2006; Whitehead 2010). The results from this study seem to support this notion in African states. In contrast, neither Catholic nor Muslim individuals showed any difference in homophobic views compared to other religious denominations.

            Several of the variables, including educational level, age, and gender appear to play no significant role. The lack of robust correlation between education and homophobic views supports the state-level analysis of personal homophobia, which seems like sufficient evidence to reject hypothesis 4. The age and gender variables lack of influence in the models was somewhat surprising since previous studies have found them to be important factors to predict homophobic views (Anderson and Fetner 2008; Stulhofer and Rimac 2009). It seems that the previously established relationships with both age and gender in developed countries may not be true in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Discussion

            This paper is noteworthy because, to my knowledge, it is the first time the post-materialist argument has specifically been used to explain variations in African homophobia. While past studies have certainly used similar variables to explain why Africa is so homophobic compared to the rest of the world, this study is unique in how it places the results within Inglehart’s framework. Viewing African homophobia in this way could have important implications for how future research both analyzes African homophobia, and how the West chooses to respond to the discrimination of sexual minorities in the region.

            Primarily, this paper demonstrates the importance of economics in the development of homophobia in the region. This component may be particularly problematic because the region is so impoverished overall, and under conditions of severe poverty, homophobia may be self-reinforcing. As implied by other authors, it is conceivable that African governments use homophobic policies as a way to obtain political support from a homophobic electorate, which in turn may reaffirm the discriminatory views of the population (Awondo 2012; Biruk 2014; Epprecht 2013; Thoreson 2014). In line with this, previous research has postulated that many governments frame homosexuality as a threat and often set up institutions to reflect this mentality for political gain (Henshaw 2014). This is especially relevant in African countries where materialist attitudes predominate because governments can easily institute homophobic laws and issue state sponsored crackdowns on homosexuals. Both can be used to reassure the public of the government’s ability to effectively govern, and to distract from problems of chronic underdevelopment (Epprecht 2014). For instance in Malawi, when the country went through an economic downturn in 2011, the country’s president, Bingu wa Mutharika, rallied popular support for his own administration by condemning the country’s problems on gays, which stoked persecution of the LGBT community (Biruk 2014). In other instances, anti-gay movements and legislation, like ones seen in both Uganda and Senegal, have appeared during times of growing dissatisfaction with their governments’ handling of country-wide economic stagnation (Awondo 2012; Thoreson 2014).

            The perverse role of religion in this study also suggests large problems for underdeveloped African states because religion remains an integral part of those societies and permeates into the core beliefs of most Africans. Several scholars have addressed how religious cultural ideals, which teach heterosexuality as the only acceptable form of sexual orientation, are an integral part of most African’s upbringings (Johnson 2007; “Making Love a Crime2013). It is also of interest that African Protestants seem to show more homophobic views compared to other religious denominations. These results back up studies from other regions in the world (Adamczyk and Pitt 2009; Ogland and Verona 2014; Olson, Cadge, and Harrison 2006; Whitehead 2010). This is particularly important for Sub-Saharan Africa were the largest religious group is Protestant (Cooperman et. al. 2010; Hackett et. al. 2012, 2011), and many missionary groups from the West are of a Protestant denomination. Many blame Western missionaries for Africa’s extreme homophobia (Epprecht 2013; Johnson 2007; “Making Love a Crime” 2014). This study provides tentative evidence that Protestant missionary groups within African states are worsening homophobic sentiments compared to other religious denominations.

            The structure of homophobia found in the context of this paper raises further questions. For instance, if economic development underlies African homophobia, should the West increase African aid and development projects to curb discrimination against sexual minorities in the region? If religious ideology has been creating a hostile environment for gays, how should the United States view the actions of domestic religious organizations working in the Sub-Saharan region? In addition, what other factors have created widespread homophobia within Africa? Future research should attempt to address these issues, in order to find the best ways to help the many persecuted individuals living within homophobic states.

            Some limitations of this study should also be discussed. The biggest of which comes from doing a study at the state-level of analysis. The possibility of a spurious relationship is always a drawback of a state-level study because the research infers micro-level mechanisms from macro-level data. This could be especially problematic for institutional homophobia, as an individual-level analysis could not be done to back up the state-level data, which was the case for personal homophobia. Therefore, future research should verify the state-level results found in this study. Having said this, the fact that both the analysis of institutional and personal homophobia as well as the individual-level analysis had similar results, suggests that this study’s findings are valid.

Conclusion

            This study sought to explain variations in Sub-Saharan homophobia through the lens of Inglehart’s post-materialist theory, which suggests that societal interests change from material to social, and survivalist to individualist, as countries economically develop (1987, 1990, 1997, 1999). The results of this study strongly suggest that economic development, religiosity, and colonialism play important roles in the development of African homophobia. Further, the relationships follow the predictions made by Inglehart’s theory of post-materialism, which suggest that variations in both institutional and personal homophobia can be explained by post-materialism in remarkably similar ways.

            This study found that both the economic developmental of a state and a greater individual income appear to counter the effects of homophobia within African nations. Just as increases in standard of living improve individual tolerance of homosexuality at the micro-level, economic development at the macro-level increases whole population’s tolerance of gays. The religious culture in the region appears to works in conjunction with economic development, and negatively impacts homophobic state structures and views within African states. However, the two types of homophobia seem to diverge in how they were affected by colonial influence and the educational level of society. Institutional homophobia was found to have British influence, which would make sense since the British enacted homophobic laws into all of its colonial landholdings. Unexpectedly, personal homophobia seemed to be greater in both French and British former landholdings. This makes sense in former colonies of the British, where homophobic laws would naturally influence personal views over time, but the same does not hold for former colonies of the French, which largely avoided sodomy laws. It could be that while the French did not put homophobic laws on the books, they enforced discriminatory policies in reality.

            Also surprisingly, while education seemed to have a strong positive relationship with institutional homophobia, the variable failed to produce a correlation with personal homophobia. Thus, it would seem that education is not significantly making African individuals more homophobic at the same time that it is bolstering homophobic state structures. This seems improbable since education would be expected to reinforce homophobic state structures through individuals. Possibly homophobia is being taught to individuals in African countries outside of the school systems, which could indicate that simply growing up in certain cultures is sufficient to instill widespread homophobic views in Sub-Saharan populations. Regardless, since the African educational system is either reinforcing the existing homophobic culture or playing no significant effect, it is certainly not acting as a counter-force to homophobia in the region.

            With the information provided by this study, a post-materialist explanation for the development of homophobia within Sub-Saharan Africa can be conceived. The findings suggest that some of the first homophobic practices came from the former colonizers of Africa and have influenced a homophobic culture to the present day in many states. At the same time, homophobia has been allowed to spread across the continent as a result of economic underdevelopment, which has provided an environment for a conservative religious culture to prosper. Therefore, economic development and religion seem to share an intimate relationship in the maturation of African homophobia. It appears that African populations stuck in a survivalist mentality tend to uniformly adopt religiously inspired homophobic norms. At the same time, African governments conform to both the interests of the population and to culture’s religious norms. Interestingly, this study found that even with the underdeveloped Sub-Saharan region, the wealthier a state, the less homophobic the country is overall. It seems that economic development has allowed cultural norms to be secularized in some Sub-Saharan sates, which has helped subdue the homophobic culture somewhat in those places.

            If this explanation is correct, there could be important implications for how Western governments respond to African homophobia. Since the phenomenon seems to be driven by a post-materialist framework, one policy recommendation for the West would be to allow improving economic conditions counter homophobia in the region naturally. In the last several years, most African states have been experiencing steady growth, which would be expected to increase societal tolerance of homosexuals over time. As of now, the homophobic actions of African governments have been tied to foreign aid, which has actually increased both anti-Western and ant-homosexual sentiments in many places. In the current economic climate, where African countries continue to show improvements in terms of economic development, Western countries may want to take a step back and allow local gay rights organizations to promote tolerance on their own.

 

Acknowledgments

            First, I would like to thank my primary advisor, Dr. Andy Baker, for his continual patience and time. I would not have been able to complete this project without his advice and expertise. I am also very grateful to Dr. Scott Adler for encouraging a discussion about my topic among my peers, which helped mature this thesis. Furthermore, I am very appreciative of the Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program for providing the funding for this research. From the beginning, Dr. Rolf Norgaard helped me develop and bring this project into reality, for which I express the utmost gratitude. Additionally, I want to thank both Dr. Norgaard and Dr. Janet Donavan for participating on my honors committee. Finally, I would like to give my highest praises to Cali Greksa and Cameron Lees for the endless hours they spent proofreading my work.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Appendix A: Summary Statistics

Table A1: Independent Variable Statistics Summary

Variable

Description

Predicted Effect on Dependent Variables

Mean

Std. Dev.

Max

Min

GDP Per Capita, PPP (in 000’s of US$)

GDP per capita divided by the number of people in the population and standardized for purchasing power parity, which is the standardized price within the domestic market. The measure was further divided by 1000 for ease of analysis. Source: The World Bank.

Negatively correlative with both dependent variables.

4.818

6.731

33.72

0.604

Education (in years)

The average number of years of schooling a person within the population of country receives. Source: a component of the Human Development Index.

Positively correlative with both dependent variables.

4.609

2.112

9.9

1.3

Religiosity

100 minus the percent of a country’s population who defines their religious following as unaffiliated. Source: the Pew Research Center.

Positively correlative with both dependent variables.

3.902

4.788

20.6

0

Polity Score

Quantifies a country’s regime type. A score of 6 to 10 is defined as a democracy, 5 to -5 as an anocracy, and -6 to -10 as an autocracy. Source: Polity IV Project.

None

2.596

4.972

10

-9

Age (Years)

The median age of the entire population of a country. Source: the CIA’s World Factbook.

None

19.633

3.704

33.9

15.1

Ethnic Fractionalization

Measures ethnic heterogeneity within a country’s population. Source: Alberto Alesina et. al.

None

0.645

0.236

0.93

0

UK

Describes countries formerly controlled by the British directly before colonization. Source: the United Nations.

Positively correlative  with both dependent variables.

0.408

0.497

1

0

France

Describes countries formerly controlled by the French directly before colonization. Source: the United Nations.

None

0.347

0.481

1

0

Other Colonizers

Describes countries formerly controlled by other European countries, excluding the British and French, directly before colonization. Source: the United Nations.

None

0.245

0.434

1

0

 

Table A2: Summary of Dependent and Independent Variable Statistics Grouped by Country

Country

Institutional Homophobia  Score

Personal Homophobia Score

GDP Per Capita, PPP (US$)

Education (in years)

Religiosity

Angola

7

74.098

7538

4.7

94.9

Benin

6

87.776

1791

3.2

95

Botswana

7

72.727

15675

8.8

79.4

Burkina Faso

6

88.679

1634

1.3

99.6

Burundi

9

82.716

771

2.7

100

Cameroon

11

91.806

2711

5.9

94.7

Cape Verde

2

----------

6412

3.5

90.9

Central African Republic

7

----------

604

3.5

99

Chad

7

90.588

2081

1.5

97.5

Comoros

11

----------

1559

2.8

99.9

Cote d'Ivoire

7

89.864

3012

4.3

92

Democratic Republic of the Congo

8

87.356

747

3.1

98.2

Djibouti

6

----------

2998

3.8

99.8

Equatorial Guinea

6

----------

33720

5.4

95

Eritrea

11

----------

1195

3.4

99.9

Ethiopia

12

90.662

1354

2.4

100

Gabon

6

95

19260

7.4

94.4

Gambia

10

----------

1666

2.8

100

Ghana

10

91.652

3974

7

95.8

Guinea

9

93.684

1255

1.6

98.2

Guinea-Bissau

5

----------

1242

2.3

95.7

Kenya

12

94.562

2265

6.3

97.5

Lesotho

6

----------

2586

5.9

96.9

Liberia

10

93.671

878

3.9

98.6

Madagascar

9

91.930

1395

5.2

93.1

Malawi

8

94.274

780

4.2

97.5

Mali

7

89.162

1641

2

97.3

Mauritania

12

95.355

3042

3.7

99.9

Mauritius

4

----------

17200

8.5

99.4

Mozambique

6

91.398

1045

3.2

82.1

Namibia

7

----------

9685

6.2

98.1

Niger

9

94.372

913

1.4

99.3

Nigeria

14

91.330

5601

5.2

99.6

Republic of the Congo

7

84.375

5867

6.1

91

Rwanda

5

82.941

1452

3.3

96.4

Sao Tome and Principe

5

----------

2970

4.7

89.9

Senegal

11

96.570

2296

4.5

100

Seychelles

8

----------

24189

8.4

97.9

Sierra Leone

9

87.802

1927

2.9

99.9

Somalia

14

----------

----------

----------

100

South Africa

1

58.971

12504

9.9

85.1

South Sudan

10

----------

2330

----------

99.5

Sudan

14

----------

3372

3.1

99

Swaziland

9

----------

6683

7.1

87.4

Tanzania

13

93.354

1775

5.1

98.6

Togo

11

90.217

1390

5.3

93.8

Uganda

13

96.592

1410

5.4

99.5

Zambia

12

84.982

3181

6.5

99.5

Zimbabwe

11

93.765

1700

7.2

92.1

 

Appendix B: Individual-Level Data

Table B1: Individual-Level Statistics Summary

Variable

Description

Mean

Std. Dev.

Max

Min

N

Personal Homophobia

A score from 1-10 denoting how respondents felt about homosexuality. 1 denoted never justifiable and 10 denoted always justifiable. The scores were multiplied by -1 so that the highest scores would denote dislike of homosexuality.

-2.456

2.368

-10

-1

18583

GDP Per Capita, PPP (000's of US$)

GDP per capita divided by the number of people in the population and standardized for price within the domestic market, and further divided by 1000 for ease of analysis. Source: The World Bank.

5.525

4.487

12.507

0.813

18898

Income

A scale of income from 1-10 denoting how a respondent’s household income compared to others in society. 10 denoted the highest income and 1 denoted the lowest.

4.920

2.218

10

1

18183

Education

The highest level of education attained by the respondent using nine possible groups. 1 point denoted the lowest level of education (no formal education) and 10 denoted the highest (full university education).

4.881

2.203

9

1

18823

Religiosity

A score from 1-10 denoting how important God was in the respondent’s life. 10 denoted the highest importance and 1 the least.

8.988

1.758

10

1

18783

Age

The respondent’s age in years.

34.097

13.862

98

16

18897

Gender

The respondent’s gender. (Male=1 and Female=2).

1.501

0.500

2

1

18898

Protestant

A dummy variable denoting a respondent’s religious denomination. A 1 was assigned to every respondent who said they belonged to a Protestant religious denomination. This included people who identified as being a Protestant, Evangelical, South African Evangelical, and Pentecostal. All other respondent’s were given a 0.

0.386

0.487

1

0

18844

Catholic

A dummy variable denoting a respondent’s religious denomination. A 1 was assigned to every respondent who said identified as a Roman Catholic. All other respondent’s were given a 0.

0.226

0.418

1

0

18844

Orthodox

A dummy variable denoting a respondent’s religious denomination. A 1 was assigned to every respondent who said they identified as Orthodox. All other respondent’s were given a 0.

0.068

0.252

1

0

18844

Muslim

A dummy variable denoting a respondent’s religious denomination. A 1 was assigned to every respondent who said they identified as a Muslim. All other respondent’s were given a 0.

0.090

0.287

1

0

18844

Other Religion

A dummy variable denoting a respondent’s religious denomination. A 1 was assigned to every respondent who said they identified anything other than a Protestant, Evangelical, South African Evangelical, Pentecostal, Roman Catholic, Orthodox, or Muslim. All other respondent’s were given a 0.

0.223

0.416

1

0

18844

 

Table B2: Summary Statistics for Countries in the Fifth and Sixth World Values Surveys

Country

Average Personal Homophobia Score

GDP Per Capita, PPP in US$ (Year)

Average Income Score

Average Education Score

Average Religiosity Score

Average Age

Ethiopia

-1.509

813.1 (2007)

5.158

4.421

9.212

29.933

Ghana

-1.583

2,554 (2007) and 3,446 (2011)

4.659

3.924

9.738

32.384

Nigeria

-2.013

5,217 (2011)

5.179

5.195

9.031

31.224

Rwanda

-1.515

1,024 (2007) and 1,426 (2012)

4.395

3.894

8.571

34.209

South Africa

-3.856

10,149 (2007) and 12,507 (2013)

5.087

5.787

8.578

37.656

Zimbabwe

-1.813

1,626 (2011)

4.859

5.121

9.605

33.772

Zambia

-2.622

2,733 (2007)

5.364

4.776

9.182

29.787

 

 

 

 

 

            [1] In this paper I use the words homosexual, gay, LGBT, queer, and sexual minority interchangeably to mean people who have sex with others of the same gender. Although there are slight differences between the terms, they are all used in the literature to describe men who have sex with men and women who have sex with women. LGBT includes bisexuals and transgender individuals, but the way the term is used in the course of this paper does not significantly distort or change its meaning.

[2] In terms of scoring for laws regarding homosexuality, one point was awarded for the given level of severity of the law and one point was also given for each level of severity beneath it. For example, countries with the death penalty for homosexual acts got six points, one for every “homosexual legality” section, and countries with life imprisonment got five points.

            [3] 1950 was chosen because it represents at least a generation away from modern policy- making in the region. Homophobic laws passed within the more modern era should reflect a more discriminatory cultural mentality.    

            [4] These questions, regarding homophobic laws, were answered using Itaborahy and Zhu’s report on the criminalization of homosexuality.

[5] To answer these questions the U.S. State Department’s Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2013 were consulted for each individual country.

            [6] To answer this questions the academic database Lexis Nexis (say who this is) was consulted. For each country the commands “the name of the country OR the name of the country’s leader AND homosexuality OR gay” was entered into the search engine. This produced all newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from the period of 2000-2014 that mentioned both homosexuality and the African country or the state’s leader in the same article. Public statements by elites or country leaders were then used to gauge opinions of homosexuality.

[7] The two Gallup surveys asked, “Is the city or area where you live a good place or not a good place to live for gay or lesbian people?” (McCarthy 2013; Naurath 2007). The Pew Research Global Attitudes Project survey asked, “Should society accept homosexuality?” (Horowitz 2013). In another survey, the Pew Research Center’s Global Attitudes and Trends project asked, “Do you personally believe that homosexuality is morally acceptable, morally unacceptable, or is it not a moral issue?” (“Morality Interactive” 2013). A Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life survey told respondents, “Next, I’m going to read some behaviors. For each, please tell me whether you personally believe that it is morally acceptable, morally wrong, or is it not a moral issue?—Homosexual behavior” (Cooperman et. al. 2013). This survey was not included because the answers were broken up into four categories, which did not match the scoring framework used for the rest of the reports. The Pew Global Project Attitudes Survey asked respondents to complete the statement, “Homosexuality should be…accepted—rejected” (Wike and Horowitz 2007). An earlier Pew Research Global Attitudes Project stated, “Homosexuality should be accepted by society” to respondents who were asked to answer, “Yes or no” (Albright et. al. 2003). The fifth and sixth World Values Surveys asked, “On this list are various groups of people. Could you please mention any that you would not like to have as neighbors? –Homosexuals” (“Wave 6” 2014; “Wave 5” 2009).

            [8] a is the percent of total respondents showing dislike for homosexuality, and b is the total percent of respondents showing positive views of homosexuality.

[9] In the analysis 2013 polity scores were used. Where data was not available for 2013, scores from 2012 were employed.

            [10] Question V253, from the fifth wave, and V239, from the sixth wave, stated, “On this card is an income scale on which 1 indicates the lowest income group and 10 the highest income group in your country. We would like to know in what group your household is. Please, specify the appropriate number, counting all wages, salaries, pensions and other incomes that come in.”

            [11] Question V238, in the fifth wave, and V248, in the sixth wave, asked, “What is the highest educational level that you have attained?” The nine levels, from lowest to highest on the scale, were no formal education, incomplete primary school, complete primary school, incomplete technical/vocational training, complete technical/vocational training, incomplete secondary school (university preparatory), complete secondary school (university preparatory), some university level education (without degree), and finally university level education (with degree).

            [12] Questions V192, in the fifth wave, and V154, in the sixth wave, asked, “How important is God in your life? Please use this scale to indicate. 10 means “very important” and 1 means “not at all important.”

            [13] Age, in years, of the respondent was determined using questions V237 and V242, from the fifth and sixth waves respectively, which stated, “This means you are ____ years old.”

            [14] The respondent’s gender was determined using observation by the survey administrator in questions V235, in the fifth wave and 240, in the sixth wave.

            [15] QuestionsV185, in the fifth wave, and V144, in the sixth wave, asked, “Do you belong to a religion or religious denomination? If yes, which one?”

 

            [16] A dummy variable controlling for the specific wave of the World Values Survey was included in a final model (not published) but was not significant. This was done to demonstrate that the results are not due to changes in attitudes in the surveys from the fifth to the sixth wave.

Miracle on the Han River, Gookjin Jeong

(Back to Top)

Miracle on the Han River: A Regression Analysis of the Effect of Chaebol Dominance on South Korea’s Economic Growth

Table of Contents

Abstract                                                                                                                                            1

List of Tables and Figures                                                                                                             2

  1. Introduction                                                                                                                                 3
  2. Background: Chaebol Origins and Characteristics                                                             8
  3. Research Question                                                                                                                11
  4. Theory                                                                                                                                     15
  5. Analysis                                                                                                                                    18
    1. Methodology                                                                                                                 18
    2. Data Sources, Coding, and Coverage                                                                              21
    3. Model                                                                                                                             22
    4. Descriptive Statistics                                                                                                     23
    5. Results                                                                                                                           27
    6. Qualitative Discussion: Diversification and Vertical Integration                                   33
  6. Conclusion                                                                                                                             40

Bibliography                                                                                                                                 43

 

 
 

Appendix                                                                                                                                        45

 

Abstract

 

How did South Korea, one of the poorest countries in the world in the 1960s, become a model of success for developing economies just five decades later? This paper analyzes the role that chaebols, large Korean conglomerates, played in bringing about robust economic growth to the country since the conclusion of the Korean War. The broad research question was: What is the effect of chaebols’ dominance in the Korean economy on Korea’s growth rate? I argue that chaebols have had a positive impact on Korea’s growth rate by being the main drivers of Korea’s export-oriented industrialization, achieved through economies of scale. I also discuss two most prominent features of chaebols—diversification and vertical integration—and how they enabled chaebols to achieve overall efficiency in production. Using cross-sectional and time- series data, I perform regression analysis to examine the effect of chaebols’ dominance on Korea’s growth rate, compared with the average growth rate of the rest of the world and with Korea’s own long-term average growth rate. The results show that, holding constant exports, education, savings rate, population growth, regime type, and natural resources, the effect of chaebols’ dominance on Korea’s average growth rate was statistically significantly positive when compared with the average growth rate of the rest of the world, but statistically insignificant when compared with Korea’s own average growth rate. The findings of this study present a new perspective on the isolated effect of chaebol dominance on Korea’s economic growth, and lay a foundation for several avenues for future research.

 

List of Tables and  Figures

Table 1: Operationalization of Variables                                                                                        19

Table 2: Top 10 Chaebols’ Share of Korean GNP and Korea’s GDP Growth                              24

Table 3: Summary Statistics                                                                                                           26

Table 4: Multivariate Regression – No Dummy Variables                                                             29

Table 5: Multivariate Regression – Year Dummy Variables Only                                                 30

Table 6: Multivariate Regression – Country Dummy Variables Only                                           31

Table 7: Multivariate Regression – Year and Country Dummy Variables                                     32

Table 8: Diversification Patterns of Top 30 Chaebols                                                                   35

 

 
 

Table 9: The Pattern of Chaebol Expansion                                                                                   36

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

Figure 1: Top 10 Chaebols’ Share of Korea’s GNP vs. Korea’s GDP Growth, 1973-1995         24

 

Figure 2: Chaebols’ Share of GNP and GDP Growth (Entire Sample)                                          27

 

 
 

Figure 3: Chaebols’ Share of GNP and GDP Growth (Korea Only)                                             28

 

I.Introduction

 

After a devastating civil war that left the country in ruins, South Korea showed remarkable economic recovery in the following decades. Indeed, from the early 1960s to the mid-1990s, the Korean economy experienced the highest average rate of growth in the world— roughly 9%.1 Scholars later dubbed this phenomenon the “Miracle on the Han River,” referring to Korea’s rapid postwar export-fueled growth, accompanied by industrialization, technological

breakthroughs, an education boom, and a large increase in living standards all across the country. One of the poorest countries in the world at the beginning of the 1960s, Korea joined the ranks of industrial democracies within a single generation, becoming a member of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) in 1996.2 Today, Korea is the 15th largest economy in the world, is a G-20 member economy, has been appropriately called an “Asian tiger”

nation along with three others, and boasts large automobile and electronics industries, some of which (e.g. Samsung, LG, Hyundai) have become household names in the United States. What explains this complete transformation? Some have argued that it primarily comes down to the export-led growth strategy adopted by Korea, often grouping Korea with several other Asian economies that also grew robustly by using the same strategy. However, this overly general explanation is neither sufficient nor satisfactory. Indeed, one scholar aptly emphasizes that development strategy for any country is a complex, multidimensional problem involving wide- ranging areas such as the establishment of long-term targets for growth and structural change, and that development strategy should not be reduced to the dichotomy between export-oriented

growth and import-substitution industrialization.3  The general consensus in the current literature

 

 

 
 

 

1 Peter M. Beck, “Revitalizing Korea’s Chaebol,” Asian Survey 38 (1998): 1018.

2 Wonhyuk Lim, “Chaebol and Industrial Policy in Korea,” Asian Economic Policy Review 7 (2012): 69.

3 Ha-Joon Chang, “The Political Economy of Industrial Policy in Korea,” Cambridge Journal of Economics 17 (1993): 153.

 

is that a form of organizing the structure of companies unique to South Korea—called the chaebol—played an instrumental role in developing a highly versatile economy that was able to adapt to the changing international demands over time.

There has been ample literature dealing with different factors that served as impetus for Korea’s economic growth. Much of it has focused on Korea’s exports-driven growth strategy, while some have also examined the effect of other variables, such as democratization, emphasis on education, and population growth. The linkage between export performance and economic growth has been studied widely and there is a clear positive relationship between the two.

Scholars explain that, both in general and specifically for Korea, an export-oriented industrialization strategy tends to exert a positive effect on growth through increases in saving and investment, technology, and possibility of structural change stemming from opening industries to world markets.4 There also appears to be a mutually reinforcing relationship between democracy and economic growth, as suggested by economist John F. Helliwell. He

asserts that income has a positive effect on democracy because increases in income levels are likely to increase people’s demands for political and civil freedoms, and that democracy also has a positive effect on growth via education and investment.5 Population growth, too, has a non- negligible positive effect on growth by encouraging the development of industries that are labor- intensive.6

 

 
 

While, as mentioned, there is a consensus in the literature that chaebols had an important role in growing and developing the South Korean economy, most lack a definitive focus of specific aspects of chaebols that enabled them to have a positive effect on growth. For instance,

4 Rudiger Dornbusch et al., “Korean Growth Policy,” Brookings Paper on Economic Activity 2 (1987): 404.

5 John F. Helliwell, “Empirical Linkages Between Democracy and Economic Growth,” British Journal of Political Science 24 (1994), 225.

6 Wong Hock Tsen and Fumitaka Furuoka, “The Relationship between Population and Economic Growth in Asian Economies,” ASEAN Economic Bulletin 22 (2005): 314-330.

 

many scholars have placed a lot of emphasis on the emergence and development of chaebols, tracing their evolution from the 1960s to the 1990s.7 They focus on the role of state intervention and the state-business cooperation, mentioning such government policies as the Five-Year Economic Development Plans.8 Some even go into the cultural and political foundations for chaebol, discussing such factors as characteristics of Korean employees and behavioral patterns of Korean people in general.9 While these authors certainly do examine the unique features of chaebols, such as family ownership and management, diversification into different industries, and vertical integration, they do not specifically delve into the effect of these features on Korea’s economic growth.

Given this review of the current literature, the central question of my research is as follows: What is the effect of chaebols’ dominance in the Korean economy on Korea’s growth rate? The purpose of this paper is to examine the link between chaebol dominance in Korea and Korea’s economic growth. The aforementioned features of chaebols enabled them to grow quickly and establish a dominant position in the Korean economy. I contend that this dominant presence of chaebols, or the chaebol-centered growth strategy, played a crucial role in promoting Korea’s growth between the 1960s and the 1990s. In an attempt to establish the statistical significance of this relationship, I conduct multivariate regression analysis. Separately, I also offer insights into the key characteristics of chaebols, and how these characteristics contributed to their dominance in Korea’s economy. This combination of regressions analysis and qualitative discussion cannot easily be found in the current literature. Thus, by discussing chaebol dominance as a specific variable that contributed to Korea’s growth, I hope to fill in the gap in the existing set of explanations.

 

7 Haggard, Lim, and Kim 2003; Chang 2003; Kim 1997; Chang and Chang 1994; Jwa 2002.

8 Jwa 2002; Kim 1997; Chang 2003.

9 Chang and Chang 1994.

 

This paper explains that chaebols’ dominance has had a positive impact on growth through their superior operation of economies of scale. After their creation and initial development in the 1960s, chaebols quickly and firmly established their dominant position in Korea’s economy with stellar export performance. In the process, chaebols gradually became what they are today—huge multi-industry conglomerates run by specific families. Government policy at the time helped form chaebols’ special structural features, the two most prominent of which are vertical integration and diversification. The former essentially refers to a process of indigenizing inputs for different stages of production, and the latter to the expansion of production into different, sometimes unrelated, industries. After chaebols became the cornerstone of Korea’s export-driven growth strategy by the mid- to late-1960s, they were considered, both by the government and private actors like banks, to be in an advantageous position to operate economies of scale to maximize profits. Faced with the increasing demands from the growing world markets, the Korean government pushed chaebols, who had the necessary capital base, into new industries, rather than subsidizing non-chaebol firms specializing in such industries. While this further widened the gap between chaebol firms and non-chaebol firms, this system of exclusive support for the large, established chaebol firms helped attain economies of scale more efficiently, thereby maximizing profits and promoting economic growth.

In addition to an investigation of the mechanism through which chaebol dominance has affected Korea’s economic growth, I present findings from regression analysis to confirm the statistical significance of the effect. Using time-series/cross-sectional data obtained from extant literature, the World Bank’s World Development Indicators and the Quality of Government Institute, I perform a series of multivariate regressions. The results suggest that, holding constant

 

export performance, education, savings rate, population growth, regime type, and availability of natural resources, chaebol dominance, measured by top 10 chaebols’ share of Korea’s GNP, has a statistically significant effect on Korea’s GDP growth.

Finally, I explore how chaebol features such as diversification and high degree of vertical integration helped chaebols operate economies of scale and overall efficiency of production. To this end, I look closely at how and why chaebols decided to diversify and vertically integrate in the first place, citing specific examples of chaebols engaging in this practice.

 

II.Background: Chaebol Origins and Characteristics

 

What, then, is the chaebol? Many scholars define it in different ways. Most simply, a chaebol is a Korean business group that encompasses many subsidiary firms under the same name.10 There are many Korean companies with more than two subsidiaries that are controlled by one family, but the Korean government and media typically use “chaebols” to denote thirty largest business groups.11 Every year, the Korean government identifies the thirty largest business groups and publishes a listing of their affiliates under the “Monopoly Regulation and Fair Trade Act” to block any anticompetitive behaviors. The act defines chaebols’ affiliates as those for which “either more than 30% of whose issued shares are owned by one person, his relatives, or a company controlled by him, or whose management such as appointing its officers is substantially affected.”12 There are numerous chaebol groups in Korea, the biggest and most prominent of which include companies like Samsung, Hyundai Motor, SK, and LG. It is important to note a few key characteristics that describe how chaebols are structured and designed to operate. First, many chaebols are family-run; often, the chairmanship is inherited from father to son. The current chairmen of Samsung and Hyundai, for example, have their respective sons in the company’s vice president positions, and they are expected to become chairmen after their fathers retire. Similarly, the current leaders of SK Group and LG also inherited their positions from family-member founders. Moreover, the rest of the founding family members virtually control chaebol firms through cross-holding of equity.13

 

 

 

 

 
 

 

10 Sea-Jin Chang, Financial Crisis and Transformation of Korean Business Groups: The Rise and Fall of Chaebols

(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003), 9.

11  Ibid., 10.

12  Ibid.

13 Seung-Rok Park and Ky-hyang Yuhn, “Has the Korean chaebol model succeeded?” Journal of Economic Studies

39 (2012): 261.

 

Second, chaebols typically consist of a large number of affiliate companies that are engaged in different businesses, all operating under a single corporate group. This is called diversification, which essentially means that big chaebols are not simply engaged in one type of business, but instead in numerous different types of businesses that are often unrelated. For instance, the general American public perception of Samsung, the biggest chaebol in Korea, seems to be that it is a company focused primarily on producing electronic devices such as TVs, computers and mobile phones, but its corporate reach goes far beyond consumer electronics.

Other industries in which Samsung subsidiaries are engaged include shipbuilding, construction, life insurance, surveillance and defense, and advertising. Although not as extensive as Samsung, other big chaebols in Korea are engaged in businesses they are not primarily known for. The average number of subsidiaries of the top 30 chaebols hovered around 22 for the 1990s,14 up from around 15 for the previous decade.

Third, chaebol firms exhibit a high degree of vertical integration. Highly vertically integrated firms seek to “indigenize intermediate inputs imported from foreign upstream industries,” and Korean firms that would later emerge as big chaebols showed early efforts in the 1960s by trying to vertically integrate through technology acquisition, human resource development, and construction of optimal-scale plants aimed for the global market.15 Samsung

Electronics, for instance, makes most of the components that go into its own phones. This is in

 

stark contrast with Apple, which does its own operating system and designs but contracts out all of the underlying hardware. The result is that it takes significantly less time for Samsung to go from contriving an idea to bringing a final product to markets, because it does most of the production process itself.

 

14 Sung Hee Jwa, The Evolution of Large Corporations in Korea: A New Institutional Economics Perspective of the Chaebol (Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing, Ltd., 2002), 45.

15  Lim, 74.

 

Given their sizes and the extent of their diversification and vertical integration, the chaebol firms’ contribution to Korean economy has recently been more significant than ever before. In 2011, the sales of Korea’s ten largest companies were equal to about 80% of the country’s GDP that year.16 Even more surprising is the fact that among all the chaebols that exist in Korea, the top firms are by far the biggest contributors. According to the Korea Fair Trade

Commission, in 2013, South Korea’s top four conglomerates generated some 90% of the total net profit earned by the top 30 conglomerates.17 In the following sections, I discuss how chaebols became such big conglomerates, as well as how they established a dominant presence in Korea’s economy.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

 

16 Eun-jung Kwon, “Top ten chaebol now almost 80% of Korean economy,” The Hankyoreh, August 28, 2012, accessed December 9, 2014, http://www.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_business/549028.html.

17 Koichi Kato, “Top four chaebol generate 90% of South Korean conglomerate profits,” Nikkei Asian Review, April

10, 2014, accessed December 9, 2014, http://asia.nikkei.com/magazine/20140410-Growth-Central/Business/Top- four-chaebol-generate-90-of-South-Korean-conglomerate-profits.

 

III.Research Question

 

As mentioned earlier, there has been plenty of literature that explores sources for Korea’s economic miracle. While much of it has examined Korea’s export promotion and its effect on growth, some have also analyzed the effect of other variables, including regime type, emphasis on education, and population growth.

Exports, for one, are a key component of gross domestic product, so an increase in exports is an important source for GDP growth. Unlike many Latin American countries that adopted import substitution industrialization (ISI) as their principal method of achieving economic growth throughout the post-WWII era,18 Korea quickly adopted an export-driven growth strategy. Korea started with an import substitution strategy in the early 1950s, with foreign aid financing the trade gap.19 By around 1960, however, it had “virtually exhausted the possibility of rapid growth through import substitution of nondurable consumer goods and intermediate inputs.”20 Additional import substitution of machinery, consumer durables, and their intermediate inputs was rejected because the domestic market was too small.21 Thus, faced with implied negative consequences of a continued ISI strategy, the Korean government intervened in order to promote exports-oriented industrialization. Intervention in the form of trade restrictions, subsidies, and credit allocation was pervasive.22 Scholars have noted that this type of outward-oriented strategy is supported by the efficiency of freer trade over a restrictive trade regime.23 Because export promotion is more closely related to free trade than is import substitution, Korea’s export-driven growth strategy has had a positive effect on saving and

 

 
 

 

18 Werner Baer, “Import Substitution and Industrialization in Latin America: Experiences and Interpretations,” Latin American Research Review 7 (1972), 95.

19 Dornbusch et al., 405.

20  Ibid.

21  Ibid.

22  Ibid., 403.

23  Ibid., 404.

 

investment, technology, and the possibility of structural change coming from opening industries to world markets.24 In summary, the high positive linkage between export performance and economic growth is “an accepted fact in development economics.”25

On the relationship between regime type and economic growth, Helliwell explains that there is a two-way reinforcing linkage between democracy and economic growth.26  The effects of income on democracy, he notes, are found to be robust and positive. This positive effect is also theoretically supported because increasing levels of education and income are “likely to increase citizen demands for many things, including the range of political and civil freedoms that characterizes democratic systems.”27 Democracy also exerts a positive effect on growth via investment and education.28   This two-way strengthening relationship has held true for Korea.

One scholar notes that the improvements in the quality of democracy contributed to sustaining high economic growth after the democratic transition in Korea, arguing essentially that an authoritarian Korea would likely have “failed to adjust to the changes in the economic environment caused by the end of the Cold War, the IT revolution, and the spread of globalization.”29

Education, too, has served as a key determinant of industrialization—and in turn of

 

economic growth—in Korea. Amsden asserts that while the role played by education in economic development in Korea ought not to be deified, a well-educated population in general

 

 

 

 

 

 

24  Ibid.

25  Ibid.

26   Helliwell, 225-248.

27  Ibid., 225.

28  Ibid.

29 Hyung Baeg Im, “Better democracy, better economic growth? South Korea,” International Political Science Review 32 (2011): 596.

 

and a plentiful supply of trained engineers in particular have been critical inputs in the industrialization process.30

Population growth also has a non-negligible effect on growth. Tsen and Furuoka, through statistical analysis, have established bidirectional Granger causality between population and economic growth for Korea.31 They explain the rationale with a discussion about minimum wage:

The issue of population and economic growth is […] closely related to the issue of minimum wage. Population growth enlarges labour force and, therefore, will push wage down. The standard economic labour demand model predicts that low wage will raise the demand for labour. As a result, the welfare of the economy is likely to increase.

Moreover, low wage would encourage industries that are labour intensive. Low wage is said to be an important factor that has contributed to the industrialization of Asian newly industrialized economies (NIEs), namely Korea, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Singapore.32

 

 

While, as mentioned, there is plenty of literature examining the emergence, development and success of chaebols, most neglect a discussion about the specific aspects of chaebols that enabled them to have a positive effect on growth. For instance, many scholars have placed a lot of emphasis on the creation of chaebols and have traced their evolution from the 1960s to the 1990s.33 They focus on the role of state intervention and the state-business cooperation, mentioning such government policies as the Five-Year Economic Development Plans.34 Some even go into the cultural and political foundations for chaebol, discussing such factors as characteristics of Korean employees and behavioral patterns of Korean people in general.35 While these authors certainly do examine the unique features of chaebols, such as family ownership and management, diversification into different industries, and vertical integration,

 

30 Alice H. Amsden, Asia’s Next Giant: South Korea and Late Industrialization (New York: Oxford University Press, Inc., 1989), 238-9.

31 Tsen and Furuoka, 314-330.

32  Ibid., 315.

33 Haggard, Lim, and Kim 2003; Chang 2003; Kim 1997; Chang and Chang 1994; Jwa 2002.

34 Jwa 2002; Kim 1997; Chang 2003.

35 Chang and Chang 1994.

 

they fail to delve into the effects of these features on Korea’s economic growth. Given this gap in the current literature, the central question of my research is as follows: What is the effect of chaebols’ dominance in the Korean economy on Korea’s growth rate?

Through this paper I hope to fill in an existing gap in the literature about the effects of chaebols’ dominance—or growing importance and influence—on Korea’s economic growth. But while my hypothesis links chaebol dominance with growth, I also consider what caused chaebols to dominate the Korean economy in the first place. In this paper I present multivariate regression analysis and comparative perspective, neither of which can easily be seen from the current literature. In addition to the regression analysis, I offer a qualitative discussion, explaining how and why top chaebol firms diversified and integrated vertically, the effect of diversification and vertical integration on efficiency and, by extension, on growth. Examining the pattern of chaebol expansion is important, as it helps further our understanding of the regression analysis by providing insight into the extended mechanism by which chaebols’ share of Korea’s output increased so significantly, thus complementing the results of regressions.

 

IV.Theory

 

States in which government-business collusion prevails can be effective in promoting domestic economic growth. The mechanism involved starts with a discussion about identifying the interests of the actors involved—namely, national government and corporations. A chief interest of government officials is to stay in power. The means to achieve maintenance of power can vary depending on the type of government, but a common way to secure power seems to be increasing prosperity and delivering economic growth. On the other hand, it is well known that all firms have a core interest in maximizing profit. To this end, firms strive to operate economies of scale to bring down production costs, and the government seeks out a strategy that can help the country grow. The result of interaction between growth-pursuing government and profit- maximizing firms is a collaborative policy that can serve to further both ends.

On the basis of the above logic, I generate my two-part hypothesis for this paper. The proposed argument expects an increase in chaebols’ dominance in Korea to increase Korea’s economic growth rate, (a) relative to the world’s average growth rate and (b) relative to its own growth rate over time. The primary mechanism through which chaebols’ dominance affects Korea’s economic growth is economies of scale and export promotion through government support and incentives. Chaebols, like all firms, have a core objective of maximizing profit. The Korean government’s key concern in the late 1950s and early 1960s was delivering economic growth. Thus, the Korean government, in order to deliver economic growth to its people, selected a few firms based on family relations and essentially made them more productive by providing various types of economic support, including subsidies and tax breaks contingent on strong performance. In the 1960s, Korea also chose to promote growth through export-oriented industrialization, given its lack of natural resources and its relatively small

 

domestic market. With this directive, the government provided subsidies and tax breaks to chaebol firms for export promotion, helping them grow in size, market share, and overall contribution to the economy. Further, exporters have a productivity advantage even before they start exporting;36 on balance, exporters are more productive, not as a result of exporting, but because only the most productive firms are able to overcome the costs of entering export markets.37 In the case of Korea, the most productive firms have been chosen and nurtured by the government.

Initially, a set of policies by the Korean government designed to identify and support certain firms based on family relations led to chaebol formation. Because of the incentives—such as tax breaks, subsidies and allocation of foreign capital at low interest rates—provided by the government, chaebols began to diversify into various, sometimes unrelated, industries. The Park regime’s astute analysis of international economic demands during its reign enabled Korea to focus on key strategic industries that changed from decade to decade. Beginning with the advent of the heavy and chemical industrial (HCI) drive in the 1970s, and fueled by continued support from the government, chaebols were able to achieve economies of scale and increase profits.

This, coupled with robust export markets provided by Japan and the United States, ultimately helped Korea produce export-led economic growth. Jae-Seung Shim and Moosung Lee explain that the government determined that chaebols were more suited to taking advantage of economies of scale:

Big businesses were seen by government to be in a better position than small firms in the efficient use of resources and in strengthening competitiveness through economies of scale.38 [Government] measures resulted in a rapid increase in production and export capacity since business success for firms depended to a large extent on their export

 

 
 

 

36 Bernard, et.al, “Firms in International Trade,” Journal of Economic Perspectives 21 (2007): 106.

37  Ibid.

38 Jae-Seung Shim and Moosung Lee, The Korean Economic System: Governments, Big Business and Financial Institutions (Hampshire: Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2008), 50.

 

performance. Chaebol were in a much better position than small firms in benefiting from economies of scale as well as in expanding production capacity. The government, too, favored a small number of large firms over a large number of small firms, since it was convenient for them to focus government attention in this way. Moreover, in allocating loans, banks preferred chaebol to small firms.39

Thanks to the size they have achieved by the start of the HCI drive in the early 1970s, chaebols were in an advantageous position to attain economies of scale through large-scale production. This, along with Korea’s export-driven growth strategy, caused the importance of exports in Korea’s economy to increase dramatically throughout the decade. Indeed, to achieve scale economies, the government allocated export licenses to only a few companies, furthering the rise of chaebols. For instance, it chose Hyundai and Daewoo to develop power plant facilities and Hyundai, Samsung, and Daewoo to build ships.40 As a result, from 1971 to 1979, the proportion of exports to GNP increased from 16% to 36%.41 Thus, we can infer that chaebols’ attainment of scale economies—along with continued government support in the form of subsidies and tax breaks—helped them achieve better export performance, which in turn contributed directly to economic growth.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

39  Ibid., 82.

40 Sea-Jin Chang, Financial Crisis and Transformation of Korean Business Groups: The Rise and Fall of Chaebols

(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003), 54.

41  Ibid.

 

V.Analysis

 

  1. Methodology

Conducting regression analysis for the effect of chaebol dominance on Korea’s economic growth first requires operationalizing the independent and dependent variables. The independent variable, chaebol dominance, can be appropriately measured by looking at the value added share of Korean GNP by top chaebol firms. I chose the chaebols’ value added share of GNP rather than sales share of GNP, since the latter gives “an inflated estimate of the importance of the chaebol […] because transactions of semi-finished goods between firms within a group are included.”42 On the other hand, value added is defined as “new value created by the producer during the production process,” and since GNP represents the sum of value added produced within a country from the production activity of all economic actors (plus overseas income earned by domestic residents minus domestic income earned by overseas residents), the total value added for a company can be considered a strong indicator of the importance that company holds in the national economy.43 In this sense, the value added measure is a much more reasonable and accurate measure of chaebols’ influence. This measure also makes intuitive sense because as chaebols become a more dominant influence in the Korean economy, their share of the country’s total output also increase—and vice versa. The dependent variable, economic growth, is expressed using the standard measure of annual GDP growth rate.

 

In an attempt to reduce omitted variable bias, or bias produced by leaving out variables that also have an effect on economic growth, I have included in my regressions a list of variables that scholars agree affect economic growth: savings rate, population growth, exports, education,

 

 

42 Robert C. Feenstra, Tzu-Han Yang and Gary G. Hamilton, “Business Groups and Product Variety in Trade: Evidence from South Korea, Taiwan and Japan,” Journal of International Economics 48 (1999): 74.

43 Jung-ae Lee, “Top four chaebol’s value added accounts for nearly 10% of GDP,” The Hankyoreh, September 18,

2014, http://www.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_business/655761.html.

 

natural resources, and regime type. Although this is not a comprehensive list, including these variables in the regressions helps to isolate the effect of chaebol dominance. Table 1 below summarizes the operationalization of the variables.

 

 

Table 1. Operationalization of Variables

 

 
 

 

Variables                               Measures

 

 
 

 

Chaebol dominance               Top 10 chaebols’ share of Korean GNP

 

Economic growth                  GDP growth (annual %)

 

Exports                                  Exports of goods and services (% of GDP)

 

Education                              Gross enrollment ratio for tertiary (ISCED 5 and 6)

 

Savings rate                           Gross savings (% of GDP) Population growth                                              Population growth (annual %)

Regime type                          Democracy (dichotomous; 1 if democracy, 0 otherwise) Natural resources                               Total natural resources rents (% of GDP)

Source: World Bank World Development Indicators; Quality of Government Institute; Lim (2003); Hattori (1997); Jwa (2002).

 

 

Three points are worth clarifying with regard to the operationalization of the variables listed in Table 1. First, in operationalizing the education variable, I selected gross enrollment for tertiary education from a number of variables that could also serve as viable measures of education because the enrollment ratio variable most widely covered the countries and years included in my sample. Second, again for the education variable’s measure, ISCED refers to the International Standard Classification of Education, constructed by the United Nations as a result

 

of international agreement and adopted formally by UNESCO member states.44 The U.S. equivalents of ISCED level 5 (short-cycle tertiary education) and level 6 (Bachelor’s or equivalent level) are completion of an Associate’s degree and completion of a Bachelor’s degree, respectively.45 Third, total natural resources rents as a share of GDP can be calculated by taking the difference between the price at which the output from natural resources is sold and the costs

of extraction and production. An increasing share of natural resources rents thus essentially represents a higher contribution of natural resources to GDP. Therefore, the resource rents share variable is hereafter referred to as the contribution of natural resources to GDP.

Because of the limited availability of data for chaebols’ share of GNP for Korea, the initial table of regressions without sample restrictions showed a decrease in the number of observations each time a new control variable was added. Thus, in order to keep the sample consistent, the final multivariate regression with all of the controls included, which produced the smallest number of observations, effectively determined the sample for the entire regression analysis.

First, using a T-test, I establish that the difference in the average GDP growth rate between Korea and other countries in the sample is statistically significant—that is, the growth rate differential observed between Korea and the other countries is consistent and not due to chance.

Second, I run a simple bivariate regression—i.e. a regression of growth on chaebol dominance—in order to see if there is any association between the two variables. A statistically significant result here would then provide the basis for further multivariate regression analysis.

 

 
 

 

44 UNESCO Institute for Statistics, International Standard Classification of Education: ISCED 2011, UIS/2012/INS/10/REV (2012), http://www.uis.unesco.org/Education/Documents/isced-2011-en.pdf.

45 National Center for Education Statistics, Comparative Indicators of Education in the United States and Other G-8

Countries: 2011, NCES 2012-007 (October 2011), http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2012/2012007.pdf.

 

Third, provided that the bivariate regression yields statistically significant results, I proceed to run a series of multivariate regression, including the other aforementioned variables to reduce omitted variable bias. If the regression coefficient on the chaebol share of GNP is still statistically significant after controlling for omitted variables, then we can conclude that chaebols’ dominance in the Korean economy is a factor that causally contributed to Korea’s rapid

economic growth in the decades following the conclusion of the Korean War.

 

Finally, to supplement the empirical findings for the regression analysis, I incorporate a qualitative discussion on the mechanism by which chaebols were able to attain a dominant position in the Korean economy, explaining how and why chaebols diversified and integrated vertically.

 

 

 

 

  1. Data Sources, Coding, and Coverage

Data for the main explanatory variable, top 10 chaebols’ value added share of GNP, were procured from three different authors. Lim (2003) and Hattori (1997) provide data points for the years 1973-197846 and 198347, respectively, and Jwa (2002) gives data points for 1985-1995.48 Due to the lack of availability of data for this measure for 1979-1982 and 1984, in coding this variable I repeated the value for 1978 for 1979-1982 and the value for 1983 for 1984. Data for one of the control variables, regime type, were collected from the Quality of Government Institute database. Data for the main dependent variable, annual GDP growth rate, were obtained from the World Bank collection of development indicators. Data for the dependent variable,

 

 

 

46 Stephan Haggard, Wonhyuk Lim and Euysung Kim, Economic Crisis and Corporate Restructuring in Korea: Reforming the Chaebol (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2003), 47.

47 Tamio Hattori, “Chaebol-style Enterprise Development in Korea,” The Developing Economies 35 (1997): 466.

48  Jwa, 33.

 

annual GDP growth rate, as well as remaining control variables—exports as share of GDP, tertiary enrollment ratio, savings rate, population growth, and contribution of natural resources to GDP—have all been obtained from World Bank’s World Development Indicators online database. The final dataset includes 2,999 observations stretched across 163 countries for the years 1970-2008. A table listing all the countries and the years in the restricted sample for regressions is included in the appendix.

 

 

 

 

  1. Model

 

My hypothesis stated that higher chaebol dominance, as measured by top 10 chaebols’ share of Korea’s GNP, would lead to higher economic growth. The basic linear bivariate regression model therefore included economic growth as the dependent variable and chaebol dominance as the independent variable. In order to account for the effects of other factors on economic growth, I controlled for six additional variables: 1) exports, measured by the total share of exports in GDP; 2) education, measured by the gross enrollment ratio for tertiary education; 3) savings rate, measured by the gross savings as a share of GDP; 4) population growth measured in annual percentage; 5) regime type, a dichotomous variable that indicates whether a country is democratic or autocratic; and 6) natural resources, measured by the contribution natural resources to GDP.

Model: Change in GDP growth = α + β1 (Top 10 chaebols’ share of Korea’s GNP) + β2 (Exports as share of GDP) + β3 (Gross tertiary enrollment ratio) + β4 (Savings rate as share of GDP) + β5 (Population growth rate) + β6 (Regime type) + β7 (Contribution of natural resources to GDP) + ε

 

The tables of regressions in the results section show that one “full” multivarirate regression—regression of GDP growth on chaebol dominance with all six control variables included—was run for each table. The model above describes the initial regression with no dummy variables. Subsequent regressions included year dummy variables to control for year- specific idiosyncratic effects, country dummy variables to control for country-specific idiosyncratic effects, and both country and year dummy variables to control for both effects.

 

  1. Descriptive Statistics

After their creation in the early 1960s, chaebols quickly became an important influence on the state of the Korean economy. Supported by the government’s trade policies and financial resources, such as subsidies and tax breaks, select chaebols grew especially rapidly and were essentially prevented from ever failing. Indeed, active government intervention can be found in every stage of the chaebol creation process. Entry barriers, erected by the government, allowed for only a handful of firms to dominate certain industries, and policies designed to support these firms allowed them to become chaebols. If these firms found themselves in trouble, government- led industrial and corporate restructuring awaited. Thus, this cycle created the perfect environment for chaebol creation and retention.49

 

 

 
   

49 Sung-Hee Jwa, The Evolution of Large Corporations in Korea: A New Institutional Economics Perspective of the Chaebol (Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing, Ltd., 2002), 17.

 

Berlin Revisited, Daniel Naftel

(Back to Top)

 

Existing research suggests that, in most cases, foreign elites hold influence over the domestic media coverage of international crises only when they are considered to be hostile. This is unsurprising, as it is often their hostile rhetoric that drives the events of crises. Thus far, however, there has been no distinction made between the various types of rhetoric these hostile leaders engage in, or how different categories of statements might have different degrees of influence on domestic media coverage. For example, might these foreign leaders’ more benign public utterances, that do not change the status quo of a crisis, still have an impact on how salient the press views the issue to be? This study attempts to fill this gap. Specifically, I study the influence of the non-status-quo-changing statements of Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev on American media coverage of the Berlin Crisis of 1958-1960. This period was selected as a case study for the following reasons: (1) U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower displayed a strong reticence to publicly commit to a specific course of action, largely forgoing his role as president to guide policy discourse at the outset of the crisis, (2) Premier Khrushchev was viewed in the American media as being the ultimate voice in the formation of Soviet foreign policy, giving him outsized influence on the direction of the crisis, and (3) the historical memory of the Berlin blockade of 1948-1949 predisposed the American media to pay attention to the crisis and view it as urgent. An analysis of New York Times articles was conducted and suggests that Khrushchev’s non-status-quo-changing “propaganda” did have some influence on how salient the crisis was in the news; however, this influence was only seen during periods of high tension, suggesting that these effects are conditional on the media’s preexisting levels of interest.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Table  of Contents:

 

Abstract:.............................................................................................................................. 2

Introduction:........................................................................................................................ 4

Literature Review:............................................................................................................... 6

Historical Background:...................................................................................................... 13

Methods and Data Collection:........................................................................................... 30

Findings and Discussion:................................................................................................... 35

Conclusion:........................................................................................................................ 41

Sources Cited:.................................................................................................................... 43

Appendix:.......................................................................................................................... 49

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Introduction:

 

Heads of state face a two front war during international crises. Not only must they define and promote the national interest, cognizant of the pressures of the international system of power and alliances, but they must do so in a way that takes into account their own domestic political incentives (Putnam 1988). Their rhetoric often demonstrates the existence of this dual audience, signaling intent and resolve to the opposition as well as framing the crisis in a way that can be “sold” to their domestic constituents. Rhetoric is not simply a product of the strategic situation, however. Leaders’ words can also actively alter their incentives and shape the course of events; in crisis diplomacy, words are often synonymous with actions.   

Audience cost theory suggests one such possible use of crisis rhetoric: augmenting domestic political risks in order to strengthen bargaining positions. When leaders publicly escalate international crises they create the risk of political ramifications suffered in the case of reneging on their stated commitments. More importantly, the potential new consequences that these leaders would experience in the case of backing down from their threats are greater than those they would have received in the case of immediately capitulating to their opponent (Fearon 1994). When a leaders makes a public promise to stand firm on an issue and then are forced to backtrack, they appear weak and incompetent. This reality implies that public escalationng of a crisis is analogous to the idea of burning bridges in game theory, whereby a leader effectively cuts off the possibility of an action (in this case backing down), to lend credibility to the leader’sir threats. Despite the perceived benefits of garnering potential audience costs, there are many cases in which a leader would instead choose to avoid actively escalating a crisis, opting to keep the situation out of the public eye as much as possible. Baum (2004, 612) notes that in this situation, it would be advantageous for an opponent to co-opt the other leader’s bargaining position by drawing attention to the delicate point of contention.

Is this possible, however? Even if unintentional, the ability to manipulate an opponent’s domestic political payoffs would have significant implications for how crisis diplomacy is conducted. It seems evident that an opposing leader would attract press attention by making statements that threaten the status quo or provide new developments in a crisis—but what about more routine, non-status-quo changing statements that could be termed as “propaganda,” and that are not necessarily aimed at an international audience?

In order to answer this question, I will examine the Berlin Crisis of 1958-1961, a period in which U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s public rhetoric displays an avoidance of undue escalation and press attention in the face of domestic and international pressures. Using media content analysis of New York Times articles from this period, I will test to see if Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev’s own public rhetoric (which was much more hostile in tone than Eisenhower’s) had any influence on the salience of the crisis in the American media. Part one of this paper builds a theoretical framework that explores the relationship between public opinion, presidential rhetoric, media coverage, and foreign elites. The second part explores the background of the crisis, arguing that the strategic conditions of the time made the American press susceptible to foreign influences. Finally, part three analyzes the ways in which the media framed the crisis, and how Khrushchev (inadvertently or not) influenced their coverage of the situation.

Literature Review:

 

The Public and the Shaping of Foreign Policy Consensus:

According to traditional international relations scholarship, the general public’s views on foreign policy were ill-informed, irrational, and inconsistent. This “Almond-Lippmann” consensus, based on realist models of foreign policy decision-making, did not face significant challenges until relatively recently when a series of studies suggesting that the public holds both rational and consistent views, brought civil society back into the conversation (Holsti 1992; Page & Shapiro 1988). Not only did the public appear rational, they also had a marked influence on how politicians chose and implemented their grand strategies. Attempting to bridge the gap between realist views of an international system that places certain demands on leaders, and the realities of domestic politics, Putnam (1988) proposed a two-level game analysis of heads of state, wherein these leaders must balance the demands of the electorate with developments and realities of the international system.[1] In this model, “diplomatic strategies and tactics are constrained both by what other states will accept and by what domestic constituents will ratify” (Evans, Jacobson, & Putnam [Moravcsik] 1993, 15). This focus on the domestic as a “limiting” force on international behavior has been particularly popular in research into democracies and how domestic political restrictions could be a possible explanation for the theory of the democratic peace.

However, the influence of the public on foreign policy is not always consistent (Monroe 1979). Explanations for this variation include different institutional structures (Soroka & Wlezien 2004; Prins & Sprecher 1999; Trumbore 1998; Risse-Kappen 1991), the nature of media coverage (Baum & Potter 2008), or even presidential beliefs on the role of politicians as democratic agents (Foyle 1999, 9). Despite the breadth of the extant literature, it is generally agreed upon that the influence of public opinion on the foreign policy agenda is contingent on the attention paid by the public to specific issues, often called issue salience (Soroka 2003; Page & Shapiro 1983).[2]

Paying Attention: What makes the News?

The study of issue salience, particularly what makes some issues more salient to the public than others, provides an important link between the demands of the public and the incentives of those with decision-making power. This process of determining salience, better termed agenda setting, has been studied extensively both in communications literature (Scheufele & Tewksbury 2007; Dearing & Rogers 1996; McCombs & Shaw 1993) and by political scientists (Wood & Peake 1998; J. Cohen 1995; McCombs & Shaw 1972). One of the most marked findings of these studies is the link between media coverage and what the public considers salient (Soroka 2003; Wanta & Hu 1993; Semetko et al. 1992). In an oft-quoted line, Cohen (1963, 13) notes that the media, “may not be successful much of the time in telling people what to think, but it is stunningly successful in telling its readers what to think about.” The average American is more separated from and less directly influenced by foreign affairs than domestic ones, making them even more reliant on media cues (Baum & Potter 2008; Auerbach & Bloch-Elkon 2005).

The central role the media plays as an agenda-setter, and the implications that this may hold for foreign policy decision-making, begs a pertinent question: who or what determines what the press covers? The media acts as a key interlocutor between the public and political elites (Baum & Potter 2008; Auerbach & Bloch-Elkon 2005; Zaller 1992; Page & Shapiro 1988; Rogers & Dearing 1988), but exactly how each of these three actors influence the act of news-making appears to be complex, conditional, and multifaceted.  This interrelatedness has generated a wide range of findings, from studies suggesting that the media is mostly responsible for determining what the public and democratic leadership consider significant (Cook et al. 1983; McCombs & Shaw 1972) to other models suggesting that the leadership merely reacts to media coverage of events (Zhang & Meadows 2012; Edwards & Wood 1999) or even that elite discourse is the main driver of the political agenda (J. Cohen 1997; Dearing & Rogers 1996). Walgrave and& Van Aelst (2006) deal with these theoretical difficulties by arguing that the media does hold significant agenda setting power, but that this power is contingent on the political climate.

Behr and& Iyengar (1985, 53) find that televised journalism has an influence on the public agenda, but that “real-word events” and the issues that the president addresses also determine what voters consider significant. In fact, it appears that the president may have an outsized influence as a setter of the public agenda (Villalobos & Sirin 2012; Edwards & Wood 1999; J. Cohen 1997, 1995; Dearing & Rogers 1996; Kingdon 1995; Light 1991; Bond & Fleisher 1990; Downs 1972), and more specifically in the realm of foreign policy (Lawrence 2004; J. Cohen 1995; Bennett 1990). Perhaps the best example of this elite influence on the media is in the observation that press coverage is closely “indexed” to elite discourse in both terms of content and media frames (Zaller & Chiu 1996; Bennett 1990). Whether due to an overemphasized respect for official versions of stories or merely journalistic laziness, the result is that ruling elites’ policy debates bound the national conversation and topics that fall outside of these constraints are usually passed over. In the realm of foreign policy, presidents are central to the agenda setting process, and their public addresses shape the topics that are discussed in the news (Druckman & Holmes 2004; Iyengar & Kinder 1987; Bennett 1990; Behr & Iyengar 1985). As the media seems to give a great deal of weight to presidents’ words, there seem to be certain strategic benefits to this influence during international crises, particularly when the relationship between the media and the public is considered. In their study of the relationship between public opinion, the media, and elite policies in shaping public views of foreign countries, Zhang and& Meadows (2012, 89) argued that, “[their] findings support the postulate that the news media is a diplomatic device as powerful as diplomatic statements.” According to some lines of reasoning, the two might be more connected than these authors acknowledge.

Audience Costs: Leveraging Deference to the Executive

Audience cost theory has recently helped to operationalize presidential influence over agenda setting within the strategic framework of crisis diplomacy. According to this model of international crisis bargaining first proposed by Fearon (1994), every public statement that a head of state makes in an international crisis bargaining situation is expensive—that is to say, it generates some sort of risk for the speaker—and so is an effective signal of resolve that weeds out “cheap talk.” Fearon and others (Tomz 2007; Slantchev 2006; Schultz 2001; Fearon 1997) have found that leaders who decide to verbally escalate an international conflict bestow upon themselves the risk of political ramifications that would hurt them if they were to eventually capitulate. Interestingly, these consequences are much greater than if they were to relent at the beginning of the conflict. This observation suggests that leaders are able successfully to leverage their domestic political capital to engage in bridge burning and thus strengthen their bargaining position. The generation of audience costs changes these leaders’ payoffs, making further conflict escalation more attractive for them after a “public battle of wills and honor” has begun. This change in personal incentives signals resolve much more effectively than sunk costs, such as military build-ups, do (Fearon 1997). According to this theory, leaders who are better at generating audience costs should prevail over their rivals in international crises as their political futures depend on the bargaining outcome (Fearon 1994). In their analysis of Militarized Interstate Dispute (MID) data, Partell and Palmer (1999) agree that there is some empirical evidence to support this claim.[3]

Despite these benefits, there are many cases in which heads of state choose instead to minimize their public exposure during crises (Baum 2004). This act of “going private,” however, can run into various problems. While leaders can choose not to escalate crises themselves, they are not always able to keep them out of the news, as more often than not, crises take on a life of their own in the media (Knecht 2010; Wood & Peake 1998). In cases where the president is in a particularly perilous diplomatic position, this public attention can negatively impact them given that greater public exposure often reduces a president’s ability to diplomatically maneuver (Page & Shapiro 1983). Following this line of reasoning, Baum (2004, 612) postulated that an enemy leader would have the incentive to bring greater attention to a crisis in which their opponent was perceivably weak in order to force their hand. 

The Public Eye and the Foreign Statesman

Is this sort of influence over media content even possible? Various studies of foreign voices in the news suggest that the opinions of foreigners count for very little in the eyes of the American public (Entman 2004; Page, Shapiro, & Dempsy 1987). While Hayes and Guardino (2013) argue that media sources and politically active members of the public can rely on foreign opinions in the face of a unified elite that acts against the wishes of the public, their study deals with foreign elites who are considered friendly and not acting against the best interests of the United States. For example, it is doubtful that an adversarial leader, such as Vladimir Putin, would be able to change the hearts and minds of the American public with claims that he is merely out to protect Russian citizens from Ukrainian oppression. After all, his expansive views of the Russian people were described in the American press as a “perverted version of the Western-developed and United Nations-sanctified humanitarian doctrine of the ‘responsibility to protect’” (Ash 2014, New York Times). Is it possible, however, for enemy leaders to alter Americans’ views of issue salience by keeping sensitive issues in the news?

The difficulty in answering this question is highly rhetorical in nature. The words of foreign leaders do not have a direct connection to the public; instead they must first pass through the interpretive and conceptual frameworks of members of the media and domestic elites. One aspect of this information processing is known as framing.[4] By Entman’s (1993, 52) definition,: “[t]To frame is to select some aspects of a perceived reality and make them more salient in a communicating text, in such a way as to promote a particular problem definition, causal interpretation, moral evaluation, and/or treatment recommendation” (as quoted by Scheufele 1999). Unlike agenda setting, which deals with the salience of individual issues and events, framing can be seen as the aspects of those events that are pulled out by the press in order to construct a narrative (Scheufele 1999). Consider news headlines: the press engages in the act of reducing an entire event or situation into a short phrase necessitates that a simplified narrative of the story be created. In the case of public diplomacy, the way in which the media frames elites’ statements creates new realities in the rhetorical landscape by placing the emphasis on information that fits into their preconceived notions of what is, or rather should be, considered important. These fames have a significant impact on the national discourse and on how people view an event (Terkildsen & Schnell 1997; Iyengar 1991). In the case of my study, the categorization of a statement being status-quo-changing or not largely depends on media frames; leaders sometimes have little control over how their statements are received by foreign audiences. Ultimately, framing theory provides a useful methodological scaffold to approach this rhetorical ambiguity and explore how Khrushchev influenced the American media.

Historical Background:

 

            There are several reasons that the Berlin Crisis, specifically the period between November 10, 1958 and May 1960, presents an ideal case study for examining the influences of foreign elite rhetoric on the salience of foreign policy issues. The legacy of the Berlin blockade a decade earlier left the American media and public predisposed to pay attention to the situation and consider it to be urgent. In contrast with these naturally raised levels of interest, U.S. President Eisenhower displayed many of the signs of “going private” as modeled by Baum (2004), due to a precarious diplomatic situation in which the United States had staked too much of its prestige on the isolated city’s fate. Lastly, a view in the American media perpetuated by certain American government officials that Premier Khrushchev was the sole voice of import in Soviet foreign policy led the media to pay more attention to his words than they might have otherwise.

Berlin and the Legacy of the Blockade: Defining the Crisis

            As the defeat of the Third Reich appeared imminent, Allied leaders met at Potsdam, Germany in July 1945 to discuss the future of Europe, and perhaps most important, the future of Germany. On August 1, it was decided that the defeated state would be divided into four occupation zones, run by the US, USSR, UK[AH1] , and France. Although it was understood that “Germany [would] be treated as an economic unit,” it was to be politically decentralized with the goal of “the complete disarmament and demilitarization of Germany,” “to destroy the National Socialist Party,” and “to prepare for the eventual reconstruction of German political life on a democratic basis” (Art. 2, sec. A). It is not surprising, however, that in the context of the burgeoning Cold War, these accords were never implemented within the confines of strict legalism.

Complicating matters was the 1949 consolidation of the three Western zones into the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG), and the creation of the communist German Democratic Republic (GDR) out of the Soviet zone. While these two Germanys ostensibly became sovereign nations, the GDR was not recognized by any of the Western powers—instead, they adopted a unified stance, asserting that the formation of the FRG fulfilled the original goal of reunifying Germany, and that the GDR, or “Soviet occupation zone” should join with the others through democratic elections, a proposition the Soviets would never have agreed to (Foreign Relations of the United States 1949, vol. III doc. 131; hereafter FRUS). Situated a hundred miles behind the border of the GDR, and increasingly at the center of a volatile geopolitical situation, Berlin existed under a unique and contested legal regime. According to the Protocol on the Zones of Occupation in Germany and the Administration of Greater Berlin of September 1944, Berlin was considered an entity separate from the other occupation zones. Despite the fact that West Germany considered the city to be one of its states, the GDR claimed it as its capital and the Western powers considered it to be a separate entity occupied under the auspices of international law (Central Intelligence Agency, 1961).

            Conflict regarding the city’s status first erupted when the Soviet Union blocked the Western powers’ overland access to the city on June 24, 1948, in reaction to proposed currency reforms aimed at improving the West German economy (Schick 1971). Unwilling to risk armed conflict over Berlin, the Western powers instead airlifted supplies to the city for nearly a year. Ultimately an end to the blockade was successfully negotiated in May 1949 with the promise of a foreign minister’s meeting to discuss issues surrounding the city (FRUS 1949, vol. III doc. 374). Despite this lull in tensions and increased East-West dialogue, there was now a precedent for using the isolated city as a political lever, a possibility that did not escape the American government. In May 1955, a disagreement over increased tolls on the German Autobahn leading into West Berlin led U.S. State Department officials to privately consider contingency plans in the case of “further deterioration of the situation,” and the possibility that “we might find ourselves again in a blockade” (Digital National Security Archive, May 10 1955; hereafter DNSA).

The continued existence of an occupied Berlin within the GDR’s territory, the refusal of America and its allies to recognize the GDR, and the increasing involvement of the FRG in the economic and military structures of Western Europe all became a significant source of contention with the Soviet Union. In 1957, the USSR sent a strongly worded diplomatic note to the FRG loudly protesting an American plan to store nuclear weapons on its soil, warning against any attempt by the West Germans to obtain such weapons for themselves (Documents on Germany, 496; hereafter DG). The Soviet Politburo had considered preventing a nuclearized FRG as a top priority since 1955 (Zubok 1993) and West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer’s seeming refusal to give up on either the idea of a nuclear arsenal or on his claims on German territory ceded to Poland continued to provoke hostilities. In early 1958, a Polish plan to create a denuclearized zone in Central Europe was rejected by the Americans (DG 517, 528) and the issues surrounding armaments and the FRG’s policies remained unsolved. Against this diplomatically strained backdrop, the standards of living between West Berlin and the surrounding GDR were becoming much more pronounced, as the West began to experience rapid economic growth while the GDR stagnated (Harrison 1993).

Speaking on November 10, 1958 at a Soviet-Polish friendship meeting in Moscow, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev finally went on the offensive, unleashing one of the longest-lasting crises of the Cold War (Schick 1971). Accusing the United States and other Western powers of allowing Bonn, the FRG’s capital, to become a hotbed of growing Nazi militarism and of using their position in Berlin to engage in “subversive activities” against the community of Communist states, Khrushchev declared that the West had dishonored the spirit of the Potsdam Accord. According to the Premier, the agreements guaranteeing Western rights in Berlin were now invalidated. He suggested that the Soviet Union replace its agents stationed at checkpoints with East German officials, and to “let the United States, France and Britain themselves build their relations with the German Democratic Republic…if they are interested in any questions concerning Berlin” (DG 542). Khrushchev’s proposal/declaration seemed to do several things at once; in addition to attempting to force de facto recognition of the GDR by the West, the Premier’s words were seen as a direct threat against the Allies’ occupied status of Berlin.

This surprise statement triggered a flurry of internal telegrams and notes among U.S. State Department officials as ambassadors, analysts, and decision-makers attempted to decipher what exactly Khrushchev had meant by his speech. While most of his threats were veiled, they broached exceedingly sensitive points of East-West contention with high margins for escalation. The idea that this was mere propaganda was quickly dismissed. U.S. ambassador to the Soviet Union Llewellyn Thompson called it “a most dangerous move,” and posited that Khrushchev was using the vulnerable position of Berlin to force Western recognition of the East German regime (FRUS 1958-1960, vol. VIII doc. 25). Political Officer at the Embassy in Berlin Findley Burns agreed with this appraisal, arguing that Khrushchev’s mentions of Berlin were “intended to include access thereto” (FRUS 1958-1960, vol. VIII doc. 27).

Despite these initial worries, internal correspondence within the State Department suggests that the majority of American government officials did not see a new blockade as a strong possibility. In a November 13 telegram sent to various American embassies, Under Secretary of State Christian A. Herter expressed the belief that the Soviets would not attempt anything as blatant as a full blockade again, due to their failure in 1948 and the potential consequences such a reprisal would have on world public opinion. Furthermore, he stated that “in discussing [the] subject addressees should not convey impression of excitement or undue anxiety” and that they “should point out Communist threats against Berlin [were] frequently made but not often implemented and [that] whether and how [the] latest threat [would] be implemented [would] depend greatly on [the] firmness of [the] Western reaction” (FRUS 1958-1960, vol. VIII doc. 31).

In spite of this endeavor by the American government to appear calm and to make the explicit argument that Khrushchev’s speech did not foretell “a reimposition of the Berlin blockade of 1948-49” (Kenworthy 1958, 11 New York Times; hereafter NYT), the American press quickly drew parallels to the previous crisis. Interestingly, the connection was often used to suggest that “Mr. Khrushchev [had] presented the Western Powers with a problem potentially far more difficult for them than the Berlin blockade of 1948-49” (Frankel 1958, 1 NYT). This return to the language and imagery of the blockade also included the implication of conflict. In a private telephone conversation with Herter, days after the Khrushchev speech, Secretary of State John Foster Dulles expressed his displeasure at the reports in the news that there were 600 planes at the ready, prepared to resume an airlift at any moment (Log, Nov. 13 1958 DNSA).

U.S. officials continued to assert that this was not a crisis—at a news conference Dulles even quipped that he was “not surprised that this Berlin probe took place,” claiming to have thought it a probable scenario (DG, 549). Media figures and certain foreign allies had adopted a tone very much in opposition to this view, and one that carried a greater degree of influence in the pubic discourse of the time. West German Chancellor Adenauer immediately donned a mantel of defiance against the Soviet threat, publicly warning them that “an extremely dangerous situation had been created,” and that any unilateral actions would be met with a strong Western response (NTY, Nov. 16 1958, 29). A tenser situation would have benefited the leader of the FRG; an imminent threat to Berlin would force the public implementation of American security guarantees, whereas bureaucratic disagreements and back-channel deals would give the U.S. the option to quietly compromise without losing face. West Berlin’s Mayor Willy Brandt also contributed to the public’s sense of urgency; an article at the time noted that when the Mayor “asserts…that ‘Berlin belongs to the free world,’ the city stands as a new kind of symbol” (NYT Nov. 23 1958).

Viewing Berlin as a symbol was certainly not a new construct—both the press and the West Germans were drawing on the legacy of the first crisis. Arguably, the Berlin blockade of 1948 shifted the perception of the city from an ex-Nazi capital that needed to be controlled to a symbol of budding democracy that needed to be protected. During the blockade, then-President Harry S. Truman hailed the “courage that [its inhabitants were] displaying in their beleaguered outpost,” calling it “proof to the world of the strength of the democratic spirit” (Public Papers of the Presidents March 1948; hereafter PPP). The success of the airlift in outlasting the Soviet blockade led to an association between the city and the fight against communism. Then-Secretary of State Dean Acheson claimed that the city was a “symbol of courage,” and that issues surrounding Berlin were due to Soviet attempts to “interfere with the whole environment of freedom and liberty” (Middleton 1949, 1 NYT). Thus, an attack on Berlin became an attack on the West and its democratic principles.

This symbolic language, combined with repeated and emphatic guarantees to protect the city, created a schema of the city’s importance within the media that effectively tied the hands of future leaders. The United States would not be able to back down on issues surrounding the city without serious political consequences (DNSA, May 10 1955). As one journalist at the time noted, despite the fact that many points of contention during the crisis were “about seemingly trivial details,” the situation, and the city, had “become a test of the value of the United States’ solemn word” (Lewis 1959, SM14 NYT). A separate opinion piece aptly claimed, “We Painted Ourselves Into the Corner” (Krock 1958, 32 NYT). These high stakes make Eisenhower’s relative silence at the time all the more striking.

Eisenhower and Berlin:

            President Eisenhower’s role at the beginning of the Berlin Crisis has been given surprisingly little attention considering its unusual nature in comparison to other Cold War crises. For several weeks following Khrushchev’s November 10 speech, the President maintained total silence on the issue. Declassified documents suggest that the President was well informed on the pronouncement (Memorandum, Nov. 18 1958 DNSA); however, the vast majority of internal communication ran through Secretary Dulles and Under Secretary Herter. In addition to staying out of the public eye, Eisenhower ensured that other members of his Administration were not engaging in any behavior that could be interpreted as escalatory. At a meeting at which a potential visit by Vice President Nixon to Berlin was floated, Eisenhower insisted that no speech on the issue be made, lest it be interrupted as a provocation. Tellingly, a party to the conversation noted that the visit would be “psychologically a good gesture,” but that there was a risk that, “things will happen that will make [the President] a prisoner later on as to what to do” (Memorandum, Nov. 26 1958 DNSA).

            This provides one explanation for Eisenhower’s preliminary caution: at the time, his Administration’s policy was not entirely clear. Considering the vague nature of Khrushchev’s November 10 announcement and the need for the U.S. to appear to be in total agreement with the FRG, Britain, and France, this is unsurprising. Trachtenberg (1991) argues that Eisenhower eventually adopted a very flexible stance on Berlin, pointing out that the President was later willing to consider the Soviet’s “free city” proposal. However, this would have put him in direct odds with Adenauer and other elements of the West German government who quickly adopted a hardline stance on issues of both reunification and Berlin’s status (DG, 577). In balancing the diverse interests of his allies and attempting to take accurate stock of the situation, Eisenhower evidently did not want to tie his hands by making any sort of public statement that could be seen as a commitment to a specific course of action, particularly in the context of Berlin’s emblematic importance in the fight against communism.

The Administration’s avoidance of explicit commitments appears to be justified in light of the public reaction to Dulles’s press conference on November 26. During the conference, the Secretary of State suggested that the United States might treat East German officials as “agents” of the USSR. This undermined the previous American policy of no-tolerance regarding the transfer of functions from the Soviet Union to the GDR, and therefore made American threats seem less credible. The comment generated a great deal of bad press for the Secretary. Accusations of tacit recognition of the GDR and of abandoning the West Germans were widespread and enflamed by the ridicule of French and other American officials (Gruson 1958, NYT). Interestingly, the President was never connected with the incident, but it did demonstrate the dangers of needing to backpedal, and it was the first in a series of episodes that made the West look divided (an issue that never seemed to exhaust the press’ imagination over the ensuing months).[5]

Eisenhower and Dulles may have appeared reticent at the beginning of the crisis, but their general avoidance of the public eye is a poor indicator of the political importance that they placed on Berlin. The city, defeated German capital turned island of democracy, came to represent many of the geopolitical, ideological, and class struggles of the Cold War, but, more importantly, it was a test of American and NATO security guarantees (trust in which was considered so vital that war was preferable to reneging on them) (DG, 612). Imagery drawn from British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain’s visit to Munich on the eve of the Second World War fueled a mantra that any form of appeasement would increase the risk of war, and that war was preferable to capitulation. Privately, Eisenhower made it clear that he was willing to wage nuclear war to protect Berlin if necessary, asserting that using this threat was the best way to force the Soviets to be “reasonable” (DNSA, March 31 1959). Burr (1994, 179) argues that this extreme stance was responsible for the President’s desire to keep press exposure on the crisis to a minimum. While threatening military action over the relatively minor incident of the transfer of functions to the East Germans might be considered a good coercive tool, it would have been “politically disastrous” if made public. Another confounding factor was the (later confirmed) presumption “that turn over to [the] GDR would be implemented gradually,” and owing to the fact that “GDR pressure would be applied in stages,” communist forces would consciously “avoid any action which…would bring into force [the American] security guarantee” (FRUS 1958-1960, vol. VIII doc. 27).

This begs the question: how would one decide which minor infraction in a series of many would justify the use of military force? In this scenario, any retaliation would seem too disproportionate and it would become impossible to garner domestic or international support. However, loss of the city was not considered an option under any circumstance. Later on in the crisis, Eisenhower argued in conversations with congressional leaders that it was necessary for the U.S. to be willing to “engage in general war” to preserve access to Berlin because appeasement would lead to total defeat (Declassified Documents Collection, Mar. 6, 1959, 597 [cited by Trachtenberg 1991]). This deterrence was both necessary and risky: how long would American allies and the public accept a strategy that could lead to total annihilation over the political status of a single, isolated city?

This scenario is much like the one described in Baum’s (2004) model of audience costs, in which leaders often have an incentive to “go private” and engage in less public forms of diplomacy to minimize the salience that the public attributes to a crisis. Internal and external pressures, as well as the vulnerable geographic location of Berlin, made escalation of the crisis dangerous. In a private conversation with Eisenhower, Dulles admitted that they were “boxed in” to the point that the situation in Berlin had become “untenable” (DNSA, Jan. 7 1959). Despite this precarious position, there is no conceivable way that Eisenhower could have smothered discussion of the city. The ability of presidents to act as gatekeepers of public attention is largely limited to minor events—crises tend to take on a life of their own in the media, the political landscape, and the public imagination (Knecht 2010, 42). Although Eisenhower waited for a long period of time to publicly discuss the Berlin situation, remaining silent for too long would have made him appear weak and he would have forfeited his unique ability as president to mold public opinion and the general discussion of the crisis (Baum & Potter, 2008). As such, he was forced to respond, trying to set a tone that maneuvered the treacherous backdrop of alliances, the Soviet Union, the press, and the public.

Eisenhower’s crisis rhetoric reflects this need for balance. Many of the President’s statements followed the same rhetorical line, and displayed consistency to the point of redundancy as time progressed. His strategy seemed to be two-fold: to appear firm and resolute (but not hostile), and to justify his actions by emphasizing the legal and moral responsibility that the United States had toward the people of West Berlin. During his first press conference after the crisis began, Eisenhower stated that:

 

There is no attempt on the part of the United States in this position to be arbitrary in the sense of trying to irritate or anger anybody else…I want to be clear that we are not doing anything for ourselves. We are doing it for a free people that have a right to this kind of cooperation, promised them in the pledged word of a number of governments (PPP, Dec. 10, 1958).

 

Several months later, he maintained this argument that the US’s goals were benign and selfless, and that he was compelled by a solemn “responsibility” not to give in or compromise. In response to more pointed questions, Eisenhower remained cagey, unwilling to lay out firm plans or promises other than the general commitment to maintain access to Berlin and to preserve the freedom of the people living there. The following interaction is characteristic:

 

Reporter: Is there an agreement to use force, if necessary, to defend our rights in Berlin?

Eisenhower: We have not said we are using force. We are saying we do not abandon our responsibilities. We will continue to carry them out, and it will be the responsibility of the other side if there is going to be any force; they have to use that to block our carrying out our responsibilities (PPP, Feb. 18, 1959).

 

Fortunately for the President, the press of the 1950’s was more deferential to the executive on matters of foreign policy than it is today, and did not often pick apart the rhetorical pretzel into which the President had to twist himself. The President also had the advantage of muted public awareness of the details of the crisis despite high levels of press coverage. A survey done by the New York Times found that most of the public was “ill-informed but trustful of the Administration and particularly of the President, nonpartisan in their approach and confident that somehow this crisis will pass” (Reston, 1959, 1 NYT). The public’s certainty of a successful outcome most likely owed to the tone of calm resoluteness that Eisenhower adopted, thereby avoiding hysteria or a sustained questioning of his policies. The various turns, dead-ends, and tensions that were created during the crisis were largely handled by the State Department through diplomatic channels, allowing the President to largely remain aloof, and left usually only to comment on the situation when directly questioned at press conferences.

            There were notable exceptions to this rhetorical approach, however. Following Khrushchev’s rejection of a foreign minister’s conference and renewed threats of a separate treaty with the East Germans in early March 1959, Eisenhower gave one of his most public addresses on the state of the Berlin situation. Broadcast on television and the radio, and announced several days prior, the speech was clearly meant to bring attention to his Berlin policies. However, an examination of the text and context of the speech demonstrates that it represents more continuity than a transformation of tactics.

            Going in the opposite direction of “private,” Eisenhower, in his address, cultivated a sense of urgency surrounding Berlin, presenting it as being besieged by a Soviet Union that wanted “no less than world domination, to be achieved by gaining political power successively in each of the many areas which had been afflicted by war, so that in the end the United States… would be isolated and closely encircled.” Themes concerning morality sought to label the USSR as an aggressor, while his use of historical precedent established the legal defense of the Western position. Eisenhower denounced the Soviet’s “free city” proposal, famously saying: “It is by no means clear what West Berlin would be free from, except perhaps freedom itself.” The President, after presenting the crisis as an urgent situation in which the United States had a vital and justified role to play, laid out three possible courses of action:  acquiescence to the Soviets’ wishes, which would threaten “the mutual confidence upon which our entire system of collective security is founded”; “the possibility of war”; or negotiation given that the Soviets demands were reasonable. Naturally, the President advocated the third option (DG, 612).

            Despite the harsh words, escalatory language, and list of reasonably definitive boundaries that he would not cross, Eisenhower’s speech did not say anything new in the way of policy proposals. Perhaps owing to this, the report received minimal press coverage, generating a few articles at most in the New York Times. Whether intentional or not, its purpose was received as informational rather than as a diplomatic exchange with the USSR. While the President generally used his rhetoric to frame the crisis as a struggle to protect freedom and uphold the rule of law, he rarely acted in a proactive way, instead reacting to new developments and depending on officials at the State Department to conduct diplomacy. Unlike Khrushchev, Eisenhower’s rhetoric rarely presaged new crisis developments, and so did not capture the press’ attention; instead the media turned to other sources of information, including the Soviet Premier.

Khrushchev and the Russian Monolith

 

During the crisis, Khrushchev was much more diplomatically active than his American counterpart. While the exact purposes the Premier had in mind when he began the crisis are contested (Fursenko & Naftali 2006; Richter 1994; Zubok 1993; Harrison 1993), evidence suggests that his decision represented a clear break from previous Soviet policies. In the months leading up to the crisis, the Soviet Ministry of Foreign Affairs had adopted a noncommittal, and relatively uninteresting, policy of non-action toward Berlin and the German question (Archive of the President, Russian Federation Nov. 3, 1958, 185 [cited by Fursenko & Naftali]). Tellingly, a peace treaty with the GDR had not yet been drafted at the time of Khrushchev’s speech (Zubok 1993). Furensko & Naftali (2006) go as far as to argue that the November 10 speech caused an internal policy struggle between an aggressive faction led by Khrushchev and a more conciliatory one led by Deputy Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan that worried about how far the West would go to prevent unilateral actions being taken against Berlin.

            Whatever his specific goals were, Khrushchev remained relatively quiet early on in the crisis, waiting on the result of a visit by Mikoyan to the United States in early 1959. The visit by a senior Soviet official, a rare occurrence at the time, was understood by Acting Secretary Herter as being primarily fact-finding in nature, and not an opportunity for any substantive policy decisions to be made (Memorandum to President, Jan. 2 1959 DNSA). In the press, it was claimed that Mr. Mikoyan “was acting as Mr. Khrushchev’s eyes and ears” (Salisbury 1959, 1 NYT). Following the visit, this position was reinforced by a State Department report, remarking that “Mikoyan introduced several modifications, but no basic change in the Soviet position on Berlin.” Perhaps most tellingly, it was noted:

 

There is another possible explanation of the Mikoyan trip, namely, that it is related to possible difference within the Kremlin leadership on foreign policy issues. According to this hypothesis, Mikoyan came to the US (1) to resolve differences within the Kremlin on the proper course of intention (with Mikoyan favoring a go-slow approach), or (2) to build a case for a renewed, concentrated drive for an East-West détente, in opposition to those in the Kremlin favoring a generally harder line. The proceedings of the Party Congress do not bear out the latter point (which, of course, is contrary to the general line of analysis presented above) but there is some inconclusive evidence tending to support the first point (DSNA, Jan. 1959).

 

It was generally agreed that if internal Soviet schisms over the Berlin question did exist, they were not major enough to warrant extensive consideration; the theme of Soviet divisions was rarely mentioned throughout the crisis, and there was a general deference to Khrushchev’s statements over those of other Soviet officials. Reading a report by Ambassador Thompson of a luncheon he had attended to discuss Berlin policy with top Soviet officials including Khrushchev, Mikoyan, Frol R. Kozlov, and Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko, it would be easy to assume no one had been there save for the Premier (DNSA, June 26 1959).

This view was held by other Western powers as well. At a tea party attended by Vice President Nixon and several U.S. Congressmen, it was reported that British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan claimed:

 

Of all the Soviet officials, the West can do business only with Premier Khrushchev. The attitude of a Soviet Foreign minister, cooperative or obstructive, is no chart at all to Khrushchev’s attitude. Khrushchev alone can speak the ultimate word on act and policy. He will not relay it through a foreign minister, and he is determined to meet with President Eisenhower in person as an equal for such momentous purpose. (Krock 1959, 30 NYT).

 

In the analysis of Khrushchev’s public statements on the crisis, there was a consistent tendency to view his rhetoric as significant and holding important policy implications, as opposed to being mere politicking or propagandizing (Thompson, July 30 1959 DNSA). Khrushchev himself helped to promote this view in his insistence on a summit of heads of state—Eisenhower privately complained that the Premier held the view that “Foreign Ministers [were] only errand boys and incapable of substantive agreement” (Dillon, June 14 1959 DNSA).

            The press, unsurprisingly, took this image of Khrushchev a step further. A series of articles appearing in the New York Times titled “Khrushchev’s Russia” argued, in a generally accepted vein at the time, that the Premier had consolidated political power to the point of being the undisputed leader of the USSR: “He alone has the power to make Soviet decisions. He also can commit his country to a course of peace or a path that leads to disaster” (Salisbury 1959, 1 NYT). This belief that Khrushchev was the only voice of import also led to a tendency to over-interpret his words; when the Premier spoke, the American media generally listened.

After a pair of speeches given by the Premier to the 21st Party Congress, the press noted that he had failed to mention his six-month ultimatum deadline, positing that this meant a change in policy. Once the headlines had ruan “Western diplomats who [had] had talks with Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev warned…against reading a change of policy into his failure to mention…his original six-month deadline on Berlin” (NYT Feb. 9 1959, 3). This type of over-interpretation by the media was a relatively common occurrence at the time. In a short New York Times editorial piece appearing December 13 1958, the author linked together Soviet demands for a summit meeting, Khrushchev’s recent statements on Soviet nuclear capabilities, and the content of Soviet news coverage, arguing that it was all part of a unified strategy, “obviously designed to influence the Western answer to [the Berlin] ultimatum, and, if possible, to sow dissention among the Allies.” The article continued on to state that “the free world must prepare itself to take these threats more seriously than heretofore,” in the case that the Soviets become “prisoners of their own propaganda, which could close their avenues of retreat” (NYT Dec. 13 1958).  

            While arguably there were many figures from the Soviet bloc weighing in on the crisis, Khrushchev was taken far more seriously than the others. East German leader Walter Ulbricht was considered by many in the West to be Khrushchev’s puppet (NYT Mar. 13 1959, 28), and Foreign Minister Gromyko was usually thought to be merely acting according to marching orders. In such a situation, Khrushchev’s words inherently had a greater ability to set the agenda than a leader who might not have been considered relevant, or who was buffeted by domestic struggles. The fact that “Soviet Union,” “Communist states,” and “Khrushchev” could be used interchangeably speaks to the power the Premier held, and the attention he commanded during the crisis.

 

Methods and Data Collection:

 

In order to determine whether Khrushchev’s public rhetoric had a measurable effect on the perceived issue salience of the Berlin crisis in the American media, a baseline of salience was constructed using media content analysis of New York Times (NYT) articles. Next, all Khrushchev’s statements appearing in the NYT concerning the crisis were catalogued and coded as status-quo-changing or non-status-quo-changing. Finally, statistical analyses of this time series data were performed.

Patterns of media attention during the crisis

            Issue salience here is defined as the degree to which the press reported on the crisis. Numerous studies (Wanta & Hu 1993; Semetko et al. 1992; Soroka 2003; McCombs & Shaw 1972; Cohen 1963) have found that there is a strong level of correlation between what the public and the media consider salient. In the absence of comprehensive polling data during my period of study, press coverage remains the best metric to determine how conscious the American public was of the Berlin crisis. It seems reasonable to assume that the most politically active segments of the public tended to have more exposure to the news and current events, making it even more likely that press coverage of the crisis would create inherent political pressure for President Eisenhower. While some research suggests that the agenda setting power of the media is limited in certain cases (Dearing & Rogers 1996), the literature has frequently affirmed strong media agenda setting on matters of foreign policy (Walgrave & Van Aelst 2006).

Press coverage of the crisis is defined as the number of mentions of the crisis in NYT articles published during the study period. The New York Times has been used in a number of media content studies to determine media agendas and frames (Soroka 2003; Walker 1977; McCombs & Shaw 1972) and is often considered to be a form of “elite media” most likely to be read by those in power (Auerbach & Bloch-Elkon 2005). As Dearing and& Rogers (1996, p#[AH2] ) note: “The New York Times is generally regarded as the most respected U.S. news medium. When the Times indicates that an issue is newsworthy, other U.S. news organizations take note.” While coverage of foreign affairs tends to be greater in the NYT than in other newspapers (Soroka 2003), and focuses more on traditional security issues (Auerbach & Bloch-Elkon 2005), it remains an often-referenced news source in agenda setting research.

            Instead of looking at front-page news (McCombs & Shaw 1972) or editorial articles (Auerbach & Bloch-Elkon 2005), I catalogued all mentions of the Berlin crisis using key words, and then read each article to verify that it was relevant to the crisis situation.[6] Not all articles were primarily about the crisis, but using the all-mentions metric gives a good measure of how active the crisis was in the press’ (and thus the public’s) consciousness. During the process of data collection, I noticed that these more offhand mentions of the crisis increased substantially after a major, status-quo-changing event. This suggests that there is a certain residual attention that other metrics to not capture well.

            The data on issue salience (SAL) was used to construct a time-series graphic (Figure I) broken up into one-week segments, which, as noted by Edwards and Wood (1999), gives a reasonably detailed picture of events. The collection period spans from the week of November 10, 1958 when Khrushchev began the crisis, until the week of May 20, 1960, when Khrushchev cut off all negotiations with the Eisenhower Administration in the midst of the U-2 Incident. After this date, all further talks on Berlin were postponed until the American presidential elections later that year, when Khrushchev hoped the next U.S. executive would be more amenable to negotiating on his terms. Examining only this period allowed me to focus on the Khrushchev-Eisenhower dynamic, as the crisis began to take on different characteristics under John F. Kennedy’s Administration.

Figure I:

This time series provides a map of the crisis from the perspective of the NYT. A total of 1,478 articles were coded with an average of 18.5 mentions per week, the lowest being 2 articles occurring the weeks of Aug. 18, 1959 and January 1, 1960, and the highest being 58 the week of November 23, 1958. A table of all values can be found in Appendix I. Most of the spikes in press coverage occurred, predictably, in conjunction with major status-quo-changing events, such as Khrushchev’s Berlin ultimatum. The large peak in early spring 1958 (around Week 19) corresponds to a combination of events, including Khrushchev’s high-profile meetings with British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, his visit to East Berlin, and his blunt rejection of a proposed foreign minister’s conference.

Mapping Khrushchev’s rhetoric

In order to determine what influence Khrushchev’s rhetoric had on press coverage during the crisis, all statements made by the Premier that appeared in the NYT were collected and coded as either status-quo-changing (SQC) or non-status-quo-changing (NSQC). “Statement” is defined as any public or private utterance, written or spoken, that mentioned the Berlin crisis explicitly, or the issues surrounding it (e.g. public speeches, letters to heads of state, communiqués, etc.).

SQC is defined as any statement that could be considered a development in the diplomatic situation, such as new proposals or threats that diverged from the prior crisis situation. The NSQC set includes all other statements. It is important to note that NSQC statements do not necessarily need to be mild or off-hand—aggressive statements and threats were included, as long as these threats were not new ones. There were several instances where a statement that might have been coded as NSQC was instead listed as SQC, if it represented a major shift in tone from other statements around the same time period.

While the coding of these statements was usually straightforward, there were several instances where the pPremier’s meaning might have not been to change the status quo, but it was a framed as such in the NYT. In these cases, the coding followed the general consensus of the news coverage, as perceived reality is much more germane for the purposes of this study. One of the clearest examples of this schism between interpretation and intent can be seen during a private reception at the Albanian embassy in Moscow, November 29, 1958. It was reported that Khrushchev had made several statements concerning Berlin, yet the exact details of his talk were uncorroborated. The following day, the NYT ran a front-page headline reading “Khrushchev Hints Talk Might Delay Action on Berlin.” The article gave two accounts of the event, one in which Khrushchev “indicated the Soviet Union would not act unilaterally to alter Berlin’s status if the West agreed to start negotiations within six months,” and the other which “had [Khrushchev] repeating the essence of the original announcement.” (Frankel 1958, 1 NYT). The headline and structure of the piece very clearly favored the first interpretation, although it seems clear that the pPremier was not trying publicly to change his bargaining stance at this time.

Khrushchev’s statements were used to construct a time-series spanning the same period as the issue salience data, broken into one-week segments. Weeks where no statements were made (or at least not covered by the NYT) are included in the table in Appendix I. A total of 82 statements were recorded over this period, 13 of which were coded as SQC, the other 69 being NSQC. This averages to roughly one statement per week. 

 

Findings and Discussion:

Granger F-Test

Using the data collected for media issue salience (SAL), and SQC and NSQC statements, I initially ran a Granger (1969) Test of probable causality, to determine whether or not SQC and NSQC statements could be used to predict SAL variations. A multivariate version of this test, VAR, has been used successfully in multiple agenda setting studies (Edwards & Wood 1999; Peake, 2001), and is a useful tool within econometrics. Significant Granger causality was not found for either SQC or NSQC statements (Table I), so the null hypothesis () of no influence could not be rejected. This does not provide a definitive answer to the research question, however.

The bivariate nature of this test fails to take into account other factors known to influence the media agenda, such as domestic elite discourse (Dearing & Rogers 1996; J. Cohen 1997) and “real-world events” (Behr & Iyengar 1985). I hypothesized that President Eisenhower’s lack of aggressive, SQC rhetoric would mitigate these effects, but it is possible that in the absence of a strong American voice, the NYT received its cues for issue salience from the rhetoric of other allied leaders, such as West Berlin Mayor Willy Brandt. Furthermore, as Khrushchev’s SQC rhetoric represented some of the most impactful events of the crisis, such as his six-month ultimatum deadline, I believed that other international events would have minimal effect. While it is still possible that NQCS rhetoric has predictive power over SAL levels, it appears that media attention was too multifaceted in this case—the aforementioned variables should be considered in future VAR analyses.

 

MA Models

 

            Next, I constructed an MA (Moving Average) Model of the SAL data to determine if it had a general trend (Figure II). Expectedly, there was an overall downward slope in press attention as the crisis progressed, in the face of issue fatigue and the absence of major developments. The same was done with Khrushchev’s NSQC statements, which had a very slight downward slope, but not enough to be considered significant (Figure III). To run a cross correlation, the data was divided into two periods (P.1 and P.2) at the Week 34 mark (June 28, 1959). This was done for both statistical and historical reasons. Dividing the data into two sets yielded stationary results to control for spurious relationships due to general trends in the data (Figures IV & V).

Within the crisis itself, this period in late June marked a significant shift. Shortly before this date on June 19, 1959, Khrushchev proposed a new, six-month deadline for negotiations on Berlin following a failure of Soviet proposals at a foreign minister’s summit conference in Geneva. After this period, it was remarked in the NYT that Khrushchev’s rhetoric and demeanor were much more subdued in the lead up to his visit to the United States (Rosenthal 1959, 2 NYT). Richter (1994, 119) argues that it is possible that Khrushchev “allowed” the conference of foreign ministers to fail in order to expedite a summit with the other heads of state, where he would be able to negotiate personally with the Western powers. This period of time signaled the end of the first major round of negotiations, and the beginning of a movement toward the next that would directly involve the heads of state rather than proxies.

 

 

 

     Figure II.                                                                 Figure III.

 

Figure IV.                                                                  Figure V.       

           

During the first period (P.1), there was a moderate (0.490) and significant correlation between NSQC statements and SAL at lag 0, and a weaker (0.424), but still significant correlation for lag 1.* As the data is broken up by week, the lag 1 result is likely due to statements that were made near the end of one week, and covered at the beginning of the next. The correlation between SQC statements and SAL was strong and significant at lag 0 (0.64) and at lag1 (0.593), and was moderate and significant at lag 2 (0.411). During the second period (P.2.), there was no significant correlation between NSQC statements and SAL, save for a spurious weak relationship (0.309) at lag -9.

Discussion

The difference in results between the first and second half of the crisis was not expected, and points to several interesting possibilities. With an average of 28.5 articles appearing weekly on the crisis during P.1, the crisis in this first phase was undoubtedly more volatile and salient than in P.2, with an average of only 11 articles. Khrushchev’s SQC rhetoric was also much more prevalent during P.1, with and average of 0.26 statements per week as opposed to 0.08 during P.2. It is also important to note that his SQC statements were not homogenous throughout the entire study period. While these statements were defined as any that actively altered the bargaining situation and could be considered a new development, some had a much greater impact on the situation than others. For example, the Berlin ultimatum near the beginning of the crisis was received as a highly escalatory act that represented a definitive break from past policy and a lapse into unilateralism, whereas other statements, such as Khrushchev’s agreement to a foreign minister’s conference, was an important development, but was not escalatory and followed as a natural part of the lifecycle of the crisis. In general, the most acutely SQC statements occurred during P.1, and while the Premier continued to make hostile threats in P.2, they were nearly always repetitions of prior ones. After half a year, the opposing sides had fallen comfortably into their entrenched arguments, and little progress was being made—when Berlin was no longer being immediately threatened, most laypeople probably lost interest in the convoluted diplomatic proceedings.

There are three main explanations as to why the association between NSQC statements was strong and significant in P.1 and not in P.2: first that Khrushchev’s NQSC rhetoric was assigned greater importance by the press during periods of high tension, exacerbating the conflict when his words were hostile or not completely clear, second that Khrushchev’s NSQC statements tended to be grouped with his SQC ones, or third that the NYT only reported on Khrushchev’s NSQC statements during periods that were already tense. This last hypothesis is unlikely; the number of Khrushchev’s NSQC statements that made it to press decreased only slightly over the total period of the crisis (Figure III), unlike the overall salience of the crisis, which experienced significant decreases after P.1 (Figure II). Additionally, the finding that media attention correlated with NSQC statements at several lags (but not in the reverse) is highly suggestive that the relationship did not work as a function of selection bias.

Likely, the answer is a combination of hypotheses 1 and 2. While there were instances, such as Prime Minister Macmillan’s visit to Moscow, where Khrushchev made a series of SQC and NSQC statements in quick suggestion, this was not often the case. Historical evidence, particularly the ways in which the media framed Khrushchev and his speeches, points to the fact that the pPremier’s words were often misinterpreted, and this speculation increased dramatically during already tense periods. As was discussed earlier in this study a high amount of importance and meaning was assigned to the pPremier’s words. There were many instances of near egregious over interpretation of the pPremiers’ words—nearly all of these instances occurred early on during the crisis.

 These results suggest that while NSQC statements can contribute to salience during periods that are already highly salient, they have relatively little effect during other stages of crises.

Conclusion:

 

            The Berlin Crisis promised to be a fertile ground for hostile foreign elite influence on the American media for several reasons: President Eisenhower’s avoidance of crisis escalation and the public eye, the media’s view that Premier Khrushchev controlled all matters of Soviet foreign policy, and American memory of the Berlin Blockade a decade earlier. The results of this study suggest that there was a moderate influence of non-status-quo-changing statements made by the Premier on the salience of the Berlin crisis in the American media; however, this influence was contingent on an already-tense and volatile situation. Given the politically vulnerable position of Eisenhower, this might have created political consequences for him, but it is highly doubtful that they were intentionally manufactured by Khrushchev. Heads of state must attend the needs and desires of various audiences, and Khrushchev’s rhetorical behavior likely was an attempt to balance the many interests of his allies, the Soviet leadership, and long-term goals. Given the unique situation of the Berlin crisis, these influences of non-status-quo-changing rhetoric are likely to be much weaker in most other cases. Further research on the influence of foreign rhetoric and propaganda is needed, but for the time being, hostile foreign influence appears to be limited and conditional. Crisis rhetoric is an extremely powerful tool, but ultimately it is a blunt instrument whose efficacy is subject to the interpretations and value judgments of other actors—when foreign leaders are not producing new and interesting developments, they are largely ignored.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Ash, Timothy Garton. 2014. “Putin’s Deadly Doctrine: ‘Protecting’ Russians in Ukraine Has Fatal Consequences.” New York Times, July 18, 2014, web.

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Appendix:

 

Date

N News Articles

NSQC Statements

SQC Statements

11/9/58

24

1

1

11/16/58

34

0

0

11/23/58

58

0

2

11/30/58

52

2

0

12/7/58

30

0

0

12/14/58

14

1

0

12/21/58

6

0

0

12/28/58

23

0

0

1/4/59

19

0

0

1/11/59

20

0

0

1/18/59

19

0

0

1/25/59

15

0

0

2/1/59

23

1

0

2/8/59

25

0

0

2/15/59

25

1

0

2/22/59

36

0

1

3/1/59

53

4

1

3/8/59

54

4

1

3/15/59

48

1

1

3/22/59

33

1

0

3/29/59

34

0

0

4/5/59

34

1

0

4/12/59

18

0

0

4/19/59

21

0

0

4/26/59

24

1

0

5/3/59

23

2

0

5/10/59

31

2

0

5/17/59

23

2

0

5/24/59

24

1

1

5/31/59

32

1

0

6/7/59

27

2

0

6/14/59

27

1

1

6/21/59

23

1

0

6/28/59

18

0

0

7/5/59

16

0

0

7/12/59

34

2

0

7/19/59

24

0

0

7/26/59

12

0

0

8/2/59

19

1

0

8/9/59

4

0

0

8/16/59

2

1

0

8/23/59

11

1

0

8/30/59

9

1

0

9/6/59

4

1

0

9/13/59

5

4

0

9/20/59

7

1

0

9/27/59

29

3

1

10/4/59

14

1

0

10/11/59

6

0

0

10/18/59

3

0

0

10/25/59

9

1

0

11/1/59

7

0

0

11/8/59

7

0

0

11/15/59

13

0

0

11/22/59

12

0

0

11/29/59

9

1

0

12/6/59

3

0

0

12/13/59

5

1

0

12/20/59

15

1

1

12/27/59

7

1

0

1/3/60

2

0

0

1/10/69

5

1

0

1/17/60

3

0

0

1/24/60

4

0

0

1/31/60

10

2

0

2/7/60

11

1

0

2/14/60

6

0

0

2/21/60

8

0

0

2/28/60

8

1

0

3/6/60

10

0

0

3/13/60

19

0

0

3/20/60

14

2

0

3/27/60

4

2

0

4/3/60

18

1

0

4/10/60

14

0

0

4/17/60

10

0

0

4/24/60

24

1

0

5/1/60

9

1

0

5/8/60

11

4

0

5/15/60

32

2

2

Total: 

1478

69

13

 

 

[1] Although I discuss public opinion in the context of democratic states, there are some scholars who argue that the same mechanisms of accountability apply to non-democratic regimes (see: Weeks 2008).

[2] It has been noted that while political scientists often use the concept of salience in reference to policy issues, rarely do scholars define what exactly they mean by the term (Wlezein 2005).  While Wlezien notes that there may be a need to distinguish between “importance” and “status as a problem” when discussing salience, later studies suggest that in survey data, different wording does not generate statistically significant differences (Jennings & Wlezien 2011). For the purposes of my study, I will define salience as the degree to which voters consider a political issue to be a significant problem by which they can gauge their leaders’ performance.

 

[3] Despite these insights, audience costs have garnered a large amount of criticism due to difficulties in detecting them (Tomz 2007; Schultz 2001), their rarity (Trachtenberg 2012), doubts over the consequences of empty threats (Slatchev 2006; Gowa 1998), and the persistence of private crisis diplomacy (Baum 2004), among others (Snyder & Borghard 2011). While many of these problems might be accounted for by the theory itself (the rarity of occurrence is not surprising as leaders not likely to win would never incur this risk in the first place) or with slight modifications, others are part of an ongoing debate over the nature, or even existence of audience costs. Despite these theoretical schisms, audience costs have proven notably instructive in explaining other aspects of international politics (Schultz 2012), and have provided a newfound importance of public opinion and domestic politics in the formation and conduct of foreign policy.

[4] I would like to thank Dr. Rolf Norgaard of the Program for Writing and Rhetoric for pointing out the usefulness of framing to me as a possible approach to this problem.

[5] For example, in the months leading up to the summit of heads of state in spring, 1960, a slew of news articles were published on the perceived differences in goals of the different Allies going into the conference. While the negotiations and disagreements between the U.S., Britain, France, and West Germany were arguably a natural part of the diplomatic process, many articles presented the issue as if the West was tearing itself apart before it could face the Soviets. For an example, see (Middleton, Nov. 22 1959, 39 NYT). 

[6] Also included in this collection were mentions of the refugee flow of East Germans to the West via Berlin in early 1960. The media often linked this issue with the larger geopolitical crisis, and the situation helped to perpetuate a public consciousness of the city. This refugee flow was a significant source of tension, and arguably one of the main reasons East German leader Walter Ulbricht exerted pressure on the Soviets to press the Berlin issue (Harrison, 1993).

 

* Significance is defined at the 95% level (p<0.05). Lag, in this case, means the shifting of one data set against the other to test for correlations between non-synchronous events. For example, NSQC data from week one is tested for its correlation to SAL from week two.


 [AH1]write out the country names

 [AH2]A page number for this quote is needed

Geothermal Reconnassance, Jennifer Bloom

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t

The Atheist Experience, Cali Greksa

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THE ATHEIST EXPERIENCE:

A SOCIOLOGICAL APPROACH TO ATHEIST IDENTITY IN COLLEGE STUDENTS                                                                                                                        

 

ABSTRACT

            Atheists in the United States remain a largely invisible minority in a highly religious social climate. College atheists as individuals have also been largely dismissed in sociology and the sociology of religion, especially with regard to their identity formation, identity salience, and experiences of stigma and stigma-coping mechanisms. Based on in-depth, qualitative interviews with 14 self-identified atheist college students, I argue that atheists begin the process of forming their identity during adolescence as a result of numerous background factors and through an ongoing negotiation of a society that they perceive as unaccepting on some level. I also argue that college plays a role in providing a supportive context in which atheists can affirm and crystallize their identities as a result of processes set in motion before college. This thesis seeks to gain a nuanced understanding of how college atheists as individuals have formed their identities and how they negotiate this embattled identity that remains stigmatized by U.S. society based on social constructions of the atheist as immoral. Respondents reported similar trends in their backgrounds and events in their childhoods or young adulthoods that sparked the eventual adoption of an atheist identity. They also reported variations in atheist identity salience as well as perceptions stigma and acceptance. Respondents coped with stigma by redefining friend groups, controlling information, and positing themselves as moral people without believing in God.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION……………………………………………………………….5

            I. What is an Atheist?...........................................................................................................5

            II. Research Focus and Questions………………………………………………………....7

 

CHAPTER 2: A REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE……….………………………………..10

            I. Embattled Identity: Stigma and Casting Atheists as the “Other”……………………...10

            II. Atheist Identity: Formation and Salience……………………………………………..17

            III. College and Atheism…………………………………………………………………27

            IV. The Current Study……………………………………………………………………28

 

CHAPTER 3: METHODS……………………………………………………………………..30

            I. Setting………………………………………………………………………………….30

            II. Recruitment Process………………………………………………………………......30

            III. Sample………………………………………………………………………………..31

            IV. Interviews……………………………………………………………...…………….32

 

CHAPTER 4: FINDINGS…....………………………………………………………………...35

            I. Precursors to Atheism: Backgrounds………………………………………………….35

            II. Pathways to Atheism: “The Spark”…………………………………………………...42

            III. Experiences with an Atheist Identity…………………………………………..…….54

 

CHAPTER 5: DISCUSSION…………………………………………………………………..69

            Study Limitations………………………………………………………………………...69

            I. Backgrounds…………………………………………...…………………………........70

            II. Pathways to Atheism………………………………………………….........................71

            III. Experiences with an Atheist Identity………………………………………………...73

            IV. Perceptions of Stigma………………………………………………………………..74

            V. Individual Coping Mechanisms…………………………………………………........75

 

CHAPTER 6: CONCLUSION………………………………………………………………...78

 

REFERENCES…………………………………………………………………………………80

 

APPENDIX A: Recruitment Material…………………………………………………..............85

 

APPENDIX B: Consent Form (HRP-502)………………………………………………….......87

 

APPENDIX C: Interview Schedule (HRP-503: Protocol)……………………………………...91

 

APPENDIX D: Religious Information of Participants………………………………………….94

 

 

 

CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION

 

With only 2.4 percent of the population claiming an atheist identity, to be an atheist in the United States is to belong to a clear minority (Lipka 2013). Indeed, 82.0 percent of the U.S. population report that religion is either “very important” or “somewhat important” in their lives, and 78.4 percent of U.S. adults describe themselves as specifically Christian (Carriere-Kretschmer and Holzwart 2008). These figures place the United States as the most religious developed country in the world, ranking closer to countries such as Mexico, Brazil and India where 86, 87, and 89 percent (respectively) of these populations cite religion as “very” or “somewhat” important. By contrast, in the developed West, 42 percent of the British population and 37 percent of the French population rate religion as “very” or “somewhat” important (Carriere-Kretschmer and Holzwart 2008). Sociologists of religion have recognized how deeply ingrained religion and more specifically, a “normative” belief in God is in U.S. society (Smith 2010:6). This social fact has certain implications for the minority of U.S. citizens who reject a belief in God and who claim an atheist identity. 

I. What is an Atheist?

In a highly religious social climate, to be an atheist in the U.S. is to deviate from the norm of believing in God and to be cast as a social “other” (Smith 2010:15). Until recently, scant research has been conducted on irreligion and nonreligious individuals, but in order to truly understand the religious landscape, both religion and irreligion must be taken into account (Bainbridge 2009:319). Although there is some debate about the true denotation, irreligion is most commonly cited as the absence of religious belief or the indifference to religion. It can also imply negative attitudes toward religion or a rejection of religion (Cline 2015). Campbell explains that although terms such as “irreligion,” “secularism,” and “atheism” are sometimes conflated, there are nuances, and irreligion does not necessarily have to include a feeling of hostility toward religion (1972:22). In fact, as Campbell observes, there exist many “religiously sympathizing unbelievers” inside and outside churches and religious institutions who are raised in a religious culture, but who cannot make themselves believe (Campbell 1972:22). This is important to note because not all non-believers feel the same way toward religion, even though they are often cast as uniformly hostile and rejecting of religion in all of its forms. Among atheists, there exists a more complicated and nuanced spectrum of beliefs than a simple dichotomy between religious and irreligious (1972:25). Ultimately, Campbell urges scholars to take into account the beliefs, actions, attitudes, and experiences of nonbelievers when studying irreligion in the same way these aspects of behavior are taken into account when studying religion and religious believers (1972:23).

It is important to note that my use of the term “atheist” is intentional. In the United States, the word “atheist” is sometimes hesitantly used even by atheists themselves due to the stigma the word carries that maligns atheists and often labels them as immoral and untrustworthy (Edgell, Gerteis, and Hartmann 2006:211). However, what does it really mean to be an atheist? Even the atheist community is somewhat split on this issue. Bainbridge observes: “In a monotheistic society, an atheist may be someone who simply does not subscribe to a belief in God while in a polytheistic society, an atheist may be one who does not believe in enough gods” (2009:320). Bainbridge also contrasts an implicit atheist with a lower-case “a” from an explicit Atheist with a capital “A.” The implicit atheist is one who simply does not subscribe to a belief in God, while the explicit Atheist consciously rejects a belief in God and actively proclaims this (non) belief (2009:320).

For the purposes of my study, I refer to atheists in the sense of those who do not subscribe to a belief in any god(s) and who do not consider themselves a member of any religion. For the purpose of ease and clarity, I will conflate terms such as “secular,” “irreligious,” “unbeliever,” and “apostate” with “atheism” with the understanding that each of these terms is itself nuanced and not necessarily equivalent. To encompass all of these individuals, I refer to all atheists with a lower-case “a.” Agnosticism will not be a focus of my examination since agnostics often “disagree less strenuously with those who possess religious faith”[1] (Bainbridge 2009:320). In my own research, I employed the word “atheist” on all recruitment material, but allowed interview participants to expand on their preferred terminology, asking them to give their own definition of what being an atheist means to them personally. This is important because views on religion and other personally held beliefs are often very subjective and difficult to define in very strict terms or as a binary (atheist versus religious).[2] 

II. Research Focus and Questions

            Important studies have already been conducted on atheist identity formation in recent years with an emphasis on atheists in a social context, studying what LeDrew (2013:1) terms “active atheists,” and more specifically, atheists that are members of atheist clubs and social groups. Empirical work also points to trends in the ebbs and flows of religious practice across the life-course, with the least religious years (operationalized by a low practice frequency) most typically occurring during an individual’s college years (Caplovitz and Sherrow 1977; Regnerus and Uecker 2007; Schweitzer 2004). The Pew Research Center reports that young people make up the least religious group in the U.S. with only 48 percent of people between the ages of 18 and 39 citing religion as “very important” compared to 55 percent of adults aged 40 to 59 and 64 percent of people 60 and older (Carriere-Kretschmer and Holzwart 2008). This trend of younger people being the most disinterested in religion is mirrored by the typical demographics of self-identified apostates who tend to be “liberal, Democrats, independents, younger, living in the West, students, and those who are living with someone without being married” (Beit-Hallahmi 2011:301). Several studies that have explored the trend of lessened religious practice in the younger demographic have hypothesized that a tendency toward a lessened religious salience or practice may just be a phase, and that individuals will eventually return to religion (Regnerus and Uecker 2007; Schweitzer 2004). However, this thesis will address a gap that seems to appear in the research relating to a disaffiliation with religious belief early in life (not simply religious practice).

            This thesis seeks to supplement the extant literature by focusing primarily on the individual, biographical experiences of college atheists who do not necessarily fall inside the group context studied by scholars such as LeDrew (2013) and Smith (2010), or whose identity formation processes are compared to those of other religious college students (Bowman and Small 2010). This research also seeks to fill the gap in the literature regarding the role of college. I argue that college functions as an institution that serves to crystallize an identity-achievement process already set in motion in childhood and adolescence, rather than as an institutional moment in a person’s life that causes a person to become an atheist, as suggested by Caplovitz and Sherrow (1977). My research will aim to understand the lived experiences of atheists including their backgrounds, how they come to identify as an atheist, their own personal definitions of an atheist identity, how salient this identity is, and the experiences of stigma and of coping with stigma. I therefore ask the following research questions:

            1. What are the background factors that lead college students to adopt an atheist    identity?

            2. What is the process of adopting an atheist identity?

            3. How salient does an atheist identity become?

            4. Do people feel that this part of their identity is stigmatized? If so, how do they cope?

           

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER 2: A REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE

 

          This review of the literature is comprised of three main sections. In the first section, Embattled Identity: Stigma and Casting Atheists as the “Other,” the concept of stigma will be discussed, given its importance in casting an atheist identity as an embattled and stigmatized identity. Included in the examination of stigma are subsections discussing commonly held beliefs regarding morality that contribute to the stigma surrounding atheists. The second section, Atheist Identity: Formation and Salience, discusses existing research documenting the various pathways taken by individuals in adopting an atheist identity. This section also discusses other aspects of identity such as salience. The third section, College and Atheism, focuses on the institution of college and its controversial role in the formation of an atheist identity.

I. Embattled Identity: Stigma and Casting Atheists as the “Other”

Although levels of stigma against an individual or group can vary in intensity, historically, there has been and continues to be a certain level of stigma and societal unacceptance of atheists. This informs the idea that to be an atheist is to claim a stigmatized and embattled identity. Campbell explains the significant development during the Victorian era that shaped the current societal consciousness toward atheists:

The Victorian caricature of the atheist as a depraved, friendless and tortured soul has left   its mark on the collective consciousness of contemporary society (and equally upon      contemporary sociology) in the form of a tendency to view his modern counterpart as an aggressively nonconforming and neurotic person who is alienated from his social milieu.        (1972:39)

 

These ideas of the atheist as “depraved,” “friendless,” and so on, are important to understand when exploring the atheist identity as embattled and stigmatized. This section will discuss stigma as applied to an atheist identity as well as the causes and effects of the stigmatization of atheists.

According to Erving Goffman, the term stigma refers “to bodily signs designed to expose something unusual and bad about the moral status of the signifier” (1968:1). Goffman uses this term to refer to a personal characteristic including race, religion, addiction, homosexuality, and so on that discredits a person and denies them “full social acceptance” (1968: Preface-5). He explains:

By definition, of course, we believe the person with a stigma is not quite human. On this assumption we exercise varieties of discrimination, through which we effectively, if often unthinkingly, reduce his life chances. We construct a stigma-theory, an ideology to explain his inferiority and account for the danger he represents, sometimes rationalizing an animosity based on other differences, such as those of social class. (1968:5)

 

Different types of stigma exist in society and do so to varying degrees of visibility. Goffman explains that the visibility of a stigma is important to a person’s identity in social situation. If, for example, the stigma is visible or impedes interaction (such as having a large birth mark on one’s face or speaking with a stammer), the person is stigmatized upon contact with others (1968:48-49). Atheists are an interesting group because they can usually “pass” or be secretive about their “failings” in order to get along in every day life by being perceived as “normal” (1968:73).[3] “Passing” can be achieved through the use of a strategy suggested by Goffman where only a controlled amount of information is shared about oneself to a majority of the public. A stigma-bearer might only reveal her true identity to a trusted minority, thereby dividing the world into two groups: a large majority to which little information is shared and a small minority to whom the stigma-bearer “tells all” (1968:95). Similarly, in many cases, atheists do not disclose their beliefs or identity to most acquaintances and may only talk freely with close friends and other trusted individuals.

            Forming in-group and out-group affiliations is another way people cope with stigma. In-groups are “fellow-sufferers” of a particular stigma (1968:112). Goffman suggests that in some cases, in-groups adopt a militant or secessionist ideology where members might actually “flaunt” some of their traits that clearly “other” them from the rest of society or the “out-group” (people who do not share their stigma) (Goffman 1968:113). Through this framework, some atheists take on an “us” versus “them” mindset and adopt a more combative approach against the people who stigmatize them. A good example of this in-group affiliation where atheists make themselves more visible is Richard Dawkins’s online “Out Campaign.” This website is a space where atheists can read, share stories, blog, and buy bumper stickers, T-shirts, and other merchandise relating to atheism. Atheists are encouraged to “come out of the closet” in order to publicly affirm their identity and make themselves more visible rather than trying to “pass” (Dawkins 2013).

            Smith explains that forming social atheist groups is yet another way that atheists form in-groups instead of trying to “pass” (Smith 2013). Some atheists who “come out” publicly manage their stigmatized identities by finding common ground with other atheists through atheist-run charities, social groups, and activism campaigns. These collective group affiliations have become much more common and provide spaces for atheists to reaffirm their identities and mobilize for a common cause (2013:96). Despite forming their own in-groups, atheists are still cast by the majority of U.S. society as the external “out-group” (Smith 2010:14). The importance of the designation of an atheist identity as a deviance from the norm cannot be understated when trying to understand the implications of adopting this embattled identity. Smith explains:

Because of the stigmatized and deviant status of atheism, it can initially be difficult to       claim the identity in a social setting. This results in part from the tension experienced from their knowledge of having rejected the normative views of the larger society, and       feeling disconnected from the rest of American culture…(2010:15)

 

It is important to explore some of the reasons why much of the U.S public casts atheists as the “other.” One of the major sources of othering and stigma is the belief that atheists reject the foundations of morality. 

Causes of Stigma: “Rejection” of Morality

            A passage of the King James Version of the Bible (Psalm 14) states: “The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God. They are corrupt, they have done abominable works, there is none that doeth good” (as cited by Bainbridge 2009:324). This passage is an example of a moral argument against atheists that roots itself in religion. Further, words such as “wickedness” are often conflated with atheism (2009:324). As a result, it is no surprise that language surrounding atheism in religious texts and ideology is where much hostility against atheists begins. The ideological structure of the U.S. sets a baseline of “good” and “moral” in the context of believing in God. Thus, anyone who does not adhere to this baseline structure may be viewed as “wicked.”          An interesting historical note is that in the nineteenth century, “free-thinkers” were seen as “naturally immoral and depraved,” and the term “atheist” was used in a derogatory fashion “to denote the immoral” (Campbell 1972:97-98). Campbell explains that the historical conflation of atheism and immorality has changed to an idea that if an unbeliever was raised by Christian parents, then he or she “absorbed a Christian moral ethic” (Campbell 1972:99). However, there exists a fear that this moral ethic will eventually disintegrate with the successive generations of unbelievers, thus a “time-lag” in the acquisition of immorality (Campbell 1972:99). Although Campbell wrote these theories on atheism several decades ago, his findings are still relevant to the current social landscape. The fear that the moral fabric of society is disintegrating is present today where about 74 percent of United States citizens think that “it is a bad idea to raise children without any religion” (Edgell, et al. 2006:213). Indeed, 45 percent of U.S. citizens believe that religious beliefs are necessary for morality (as cited by Bainbridge 2009:324). Although not a majority, this is still a significant portion of citizens who agree with the historical view that “since religion fosters morality, irreligion fosters immorality” (Campbell 1972:97). According to Edgell, Gerteis, and Hartmann, “Americans construct the atheist as the symbolic representation of one who rejects the basis for moral solidarity and cultural membership in American society altogether” (2009:230). The conflation of religion with morality comes, in many ways, from both an idea of divine policing and a culture based around Christianity as the acceptable ideology, used as a yardstick to judge any other moral views.

In the eyes of some religious people, the suggestion that “God is always watching” keeps the faithful on their best behavior, and this idea of constant policing serves as a religious foundation for morality (Gervais and Norenzayan 2012:484). The presumption that morality is rooted in God or in religion proves problematic for atheists who do not subscribe to the idea of a divine being policing their actions, and creates a certain amount of distrust from people who fear that immoral actions may accompany a lack of belief in eternal punishment for wrongdoing. This is the primary explanation for atheists being stigmatized, labeled as deviant, and sometimes confronted with marginalization, discrimination, and exclusion from their communities.

Profound examples of this stigmatization are evident in political life. Although the Constitution of the United States prohibits the use of religious tests in order to hold public office (U.S. Constitution, Article 6, Section 3), several states have laws excluding atheists from holding office. The Arkansas Constitution forbids atheists from holding public office or serving on juries because they are not considered “competent” (Arkansas Constitution, Article 19, Section 1). Mississippi, Texas, South Carolina, and other states contain similar provisions in their constitutions (Bulger 2013). Although many regard these provisions as irrelevant in the twenty-first century, atheists in public office are far and few between, indicating that legal prohibitions still on the books may play a factor in the election of atheists or the attitudes of the voting population.[4] There are currently no (uncloseted) atheists in the United States Congress, and only one open atheist, California’s Pete Stark, has ever served in the U.S. Congress (Moreno 2014). Not only are atheists institutionally excluded from political life, but their status as outsiders sometimes results in experiences of discrimination and feelings of otherness from the rest of “mainstream” society. Previous research has noted other instances of atheist marginalization including bullying and harassment of atheist children in schools (Hamblin 2013) and the exclusion of atheists from organizations such as the Boy Scouts (Hill and Sprigg 2013).

In addition to the umbrella notion of “religion” indicating a baseline for moral goodness (and as a requisite for holding public office and being able to fully participate as a U.S. citizen), Christianity, specifically, is seen as the baseline of morality with which other sources of morality are judged. Campbell explains:

Measurement of the degree of immorality of various groups in society thus becomes a very slippery exercise in which there is a real danger of projecting the morality of a dominant ethnic or class group on to a nonconforming minority and hence ‘defining’ immorality into existence. Even where all groups in society are agreed on the acts which are to be regarded as immoral, they may attach a very different emphasis to the degree of immorality involved. (1972:103)

 

This statement explains how any variations in moral belief outside of Christianity (the dominant religious belief) can be perceived as immoral. For example, since orthodox Christian doctrine forbids premarital sex or homosexual activity, these acts can become “immoral” in the eyes of society as a whole. Thus, it may be seen as problematic when a person has premarital sex or engages in homosexual activities even though the person may not see these actions as morally wrong (Campbell 1972:103-104). This heavily Christian-influenced idea of morality is still seen today in several states that still have anti-sodomy and anti-homosexuality laws on the books (Ayres and Eskridge 2014). Many of the arguments that influence policies banning gay marriage are heavily rooted in religion and Christianity specifically, thus making debates regarding such subjects more about whether or not such acts should be legal from a Christian standpoint. Campbell suggests that even if atheists do not share a specifically Christian or religiously informed morality, this does not mean that they are immoral or have a lessened “capacity for self-control,” but rather that there exists a variation in moral judgments (Campbell 1972:104). It is worth noting that several studies have been conducted that have refuted the assumption that atheists are less moral than their religious counterparts (often measured by the willingness to commit crimes). In a study performed in the United States between 1924 and 1934, it was shown that delinquency and criminality were actually lower in people without religious affiliation than in Catholics, Protestants, and Jews, indicating a lack of a correlation between immorality and lack of religious affiliation (as cited by Campbell 1972:101).

Despite a lack of correlation between religious belief and morality, atheists continue to suffer from negative stereotypes that have serious social consequences. In fact, Edgell, Gerteis, and Hartmann cite atheists as one of the most stigmatized groups in the United States (2006:212). The same researchers explain that more people in the U.S. would have their children marry or otherwise associate with a person from a background of just about any other cultural, minority, or religious group than atheist(s). Most U.S. citizens also believe that atheists are the group least likely to share their worldview (2006:216). In a list comparing commonly stigmatized groups including Muslims, homosexuals, immigrants, and African Americans, 39.6 percent of participants cited atheists as least likely to share their vision of American society. This is compared to 26.3 percent of participants who cited Muslims and 22.6 percent of participants who cited homosexuals as the least likely to share their vision. Further, 47.6 percent said they would oppose their children marrying an atheist compared to 33.5 percent and 27.2 percent of people who were opposed to their child marrying a Muslim or an African American, respectively (Edgell, et al. 2006:218).

Not only are atheists commonly mistrusted for not sharing a common “source” of morality, but they are often disliked and maligned by other groups. The Pew Research Center performed a study of how different groups of Americans rated other groups on a “feeling thermometer” where a temperature of 100 was the warmest in terms of feeling, and a 0 was the coldest (Cooperman et. al. 2014). According to this study, the American public viewed Jews, Catholics, and Evangelical Christians most warmly on the “feeling thermometer.” These groups were given a rating of at least 60 degrees. Atheists and Muslims were on the coolest side of the thermometer with atheists receiving an average of 41 degrees and Muslims an average of 40 degrees. Atheists were rated on the coldest part of the scale by 40 percent of the studied population with Evangelical Christians tending to rate atheists the lowest with an average of 25 degrees (Cooperman et. al. 2014).

As discussed above, atheists encounter a large amount of mistrust in the social world,  which reinforces the idea of an atheist identity as an embattled identity that is difficult to outwardly affirm without the possibility of consequences such as marginalization and exclusion. Despite the stigmatization of atheists, people continue to achieve this identity, often undergoing a process of identity formation.

II. Atheist Identity: Formation and Salience

Religion is often taken to be an important part of a person’s identity. Similarly, a lack of a religious identity can become just as important to an individual. Social psychologist George Herbert Mead, introduces the concept of the self, an important entity that comprises a person’s identities. He suggests that the self is not present at birth, but arises through a gradual process of social interaction with other individuals (Mead 1934:135). Mead’s conceptualization of the self is instructive when studying identity because it provides a framework for viewing the self and identity as emergent through socialization, experience, and interaction. The self comprises a variety of identities arranged in a hierarchy of importance. Smith articulates the term “identity” as referring to “that which individuals use to describe and define their membership in groups, their relative positions in social life, and the various ascribed and achieved statuses they hold” (2010:3). The idea of atheism as an achieved rather than an ascribed identity is important when looking at the factors involved in the process of becoming an atheist. This section will focus on the identity formation process of atheists as well as the religious disaffiliation of adolescents and young adults. Later sections will deal with identity salience and the factors that play in to the identity salience of atheism as an embattled, minority identity.

Atheist Identity Formation

In his study of 40 active members of atheist social groups, Smith identified a process that his participants underwent to become atheists. According to Smith, an atheist identity is one that consists of a “not-self” identity (2010:14). This means that many atheists explain their identity based on beliefs that they do not have or activities in which they do not participate (2010:14). Smith likens atheists to vegans, nondrinkers, and virgins (2010:14) in that all of these particular identities imply behaviors in which the individual does not partake such as believing in God, eating animal products, drinking alcohol, or having sex. The process of “becoming” an atheist that many atheists shared is outlined by Smith in four major steps: (1) the realization of the “ubiquity of theism,” (2)“questioning theism,” (3)“rejecting theism,” and (4)“coming out atheist” (2010:1).

According to Smith’s study, many of the atheists cited a prior belief in God, and many verified that even if they grew up in a secular household, they noticed the normative belief in their communities was the belief in God, and specifically in the Christian God. One participant said that even though she was raised in a secular household, she still went to church with her friends because she wanted to feel included (2010:7). This indicates how a belief in God can be a “default” stance in the United States that one, especially as a child, may take in order to be accepted by peers and the dominant culture. Smith states, “even when there was low religious participation, the normative belief in God was still present” (2010:7).

The step of questioning theism was experienced by many of Smith’s respondents upon entering college when they began to doubt the beliefs with which they had been raised. In college, respondents encountered new points of view, engaged in new relationships, and in the cases of those who had a religious background, attended church less and less. One respondent commented, “They [fellow students] didn’t go to church on Sunday and nothing bad was happening to them!” (2010:8). Respondents in college also had interactions with atheist peers who would engage them in critical conversation about religion. This began a questioning process for the respondents who came to view religion as illogical and contradictory (2010:9). Smith explains the social process that respondents had to undergo in order to reject religion by stating, “Because religious beliefs and practices are socially learned, there must take place an unlearning process for those who eventually come to reject it” (2010:9). People would undergo a “role-exit” process where they would critique the beliefs with which they grew up and would realize that they were dissatisfied with the incongruence of their previous beliefs and their new worldviews informed by new experiences and interactions in college. They would then reinterpret the teachings of the Bible or other religious texts with a new, more skeptical understanding of their previous beliefs (2010:9) leading to a crossroads of deciding whether or not to reject their former religious beliefs.

The third step suggested by Smith in becoming an atheist was the rejection of theism where respondents explicitly rejected both the idea of God and religion and found a new way to legitimate a worldview without God using scientific explanations (2010:13). This “coming out” phase occurred when the new atheist acknowledged that atheism is a deviant view in a predominantly religious culture, and then found empowerment by actively stating the new beliefs. A respondent in Smith’s study reported upon “coming out”: “It was very empowering…for me it was the idea of setting your own purpose, that it’s just you, [that] it comes from within; that’s pretty exciting!” (2010:17).

For many, the new atheist identity became a salient part of self-identity even if the person experienced negative reactions from others after “coming out” (2010:15). Smith explains that even if these new atheists recognized their marginalized position in society, rather than feeling a sense of anomie, many respondents cited feelings of autonomy because it was through their own personal identity construction that they achieved this particular aspect of their identity (2010:17).

Another important piece of the literature in regard to atheist identity formation is a 2013 study by LeDrew. In his article, LeDrew explores the experiences of “active atheists,” who in LeDrew’s terms are actively engaged atheists who are involved in atheist groups and organizations. He explains their attitudes toward their own identity formation as well as attitudes toward the religious community. LeDrew explains identity development as a process of discovery including three steps: the discovery of ideas, self-discovery, and the discovery of the collective (2013:1).

LeDrew identified what he termed the “standard trajectory” in atheist identity formation as: “people experiencing a religious socialization who were believers, but went through a process of questioning and doubt that eventually resulted in abandoning their beliefs and adopting an atheist identity” (2013:5). LeDrew references Smith’s work, mentioning the normative view and socialization including a belief in God (a “theistic socialization and social environment”) that the atheist comes to reject after progressing through questioning and doubt phases that result from education and exposure to new ideas (2013:5). LeDrew specifically identifies a “period of doubt” in a person’s teenage years through their twenties (2013:5). One of LeDrew’s participants identified that between the ages of 13 to 16 he experienced doubt because “things weren’t making sense because questions weren’t being answered” (2013:6). The participant educated himself more about science, realizing the inconsistencies of his religion and the perceived consistencies of science. This questioning continued into his college years, especially after his exposure to atheist friends and roommates (2013:6). The participant read The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins and was finally convinced of his full-fledged transformation to atheism, with Dawkin’s book providing him with the “language and concepts to articulate the doubts and questions he had struggled with for years” (2013:7).

An important distinction made by LeDrew relates to his participants’ backgrounds in terms of either secular socialization or religious socialization. Secular socialization is a background where religion was never important and the respondent’s atheism proceeded from socialization. Some participants actually explored religion before doubting and going back to atheism (2013:10). In respondents who described a religious socialization, some claimed to be skeptics from the beginning. Others were termed “seekers” who sought out religion, but “could not make themselves believe what they had been taught” (2013:13). An interesting theme discovered was that many atheists adopted a narrative of a “discovery” of atheism rather than a conversion or deconversion, meaning that they recognized something about themselves that had previously existed (2013:8).

            Although the level of education is certainly a factor mentioned in the apostasy of his participants, LeDrew mentions that education is certainly not the only factor that influences religiosity or a lack thereof as there are contradictory findings in the area of the level of education in relation to the level of apostasy. LeDrew also cites socioeconomic status and namely financial stability as a factor in nonbelief. This is important to note as many celebrity atheists like Richard Dawkins link religiosity to a lack of education or just sheer ignorance. As LeDrew succinctly states: “religiosity is closely related to social conditions rather than simply a product of ignorance that is eradicated with science education” (2013:7).

Emergence of Atheism in Adolescence and Early Adulthood

The emergence of atheism in adolescence and early adulthood in some individuals has been a rarely studied topic, however, some sociologists have attempted to understand the social conditions present that precipitate the decline of religiosity in young people. In his study of the emergence of atheism in adolescents, Hunsberger claims that many adolescents who become atheists are often raised in households where religion is not heavily emphasized or where parents are not necessarily good models of religion (2000:234). Therefore, “most apostasy does not represent a reversal in the socialisation process, but rather it might be characterized as a slight bend in the religious socialisation line” (2000:234). Hunsberger explains that a weak level of religion in the home can cause adolescents to “drift” away from this religion during these years (2000:234). When compared to adolescents who come from fairly secular households and who actually convert to religion with very high levels of religiosity, apostates begin questioning their beliefs much earlier in life, mainly at the onset of adolescence. Hunsberger explains, “when young people start questioning a lot of things…their edifice of beliefs then began to crumble bit by bit, until finally the whole structure came crashing down” (2000:240). This process is described as taking a relatively large amount of time (usually a few years) because many apostates view leaving the family religion as a “daunting” process (2000:240). Hunsberger also states that low levels of religious influence in the home are not necessarily always indicative as causes of “drift” away from religion. This is simply a trend among adolescents, especially those who grow up with tendencies to question their beliefs and actively seek out truth and answers (2000:241).

            In a study of German and U.S. adolescents, Schweitzer finds that age plays perhaps the largest role in an individual choosing to leave religion, and that young people within the ages of 18 and 30 are the group most likely to leave the church (2004:66). However, Schweitzer says that later in life, many of these people who previously leave the church may cycle back, and that this “moratorium period” will be abandoned as “experimental attitudes” are left behind (2004:70). Regnerus and Uecker explain that people may simply abandon a high level of religious participation in college due to numerous factors such as a late-night orientation, deviance from religious norms (having sex, drinking, and so on), and the social norm of not appearing too outwardly religious (2007:4). Despite a decline in religious practice frequency, Regnerus and Uecker claim that the majority of college students maintain the same level and importance of religious faith that remain “largely untouched for the duration of their education” (2007:3-4). This faith “lies dormant,” during many students’ college years, and is often returned to later in life (Regnerus and Uecker 2007:3-4). Findings by Christianist sociologists such as Schweitzer (2004) suggest a similar cycle where apostates later return to religious practice.

Salience of Atheist Identities

Along with explanations of identity and identity formation of atheists, it is also important to discuss identity salience, as the salience of an atheist identity is particular to the fact that atheism is a minority status embroiled in a highly religious social climate in the United States. In her definition of identity salience, Morris refers to this concept as “the likelihood that a given identity will be active across situations” (2013:24). Identities reside in a hierarchy of importance related to identity commitment, where identities with the most commitment also are the most salient (Morris 2013:24). Identity salience is particular to an individual, and different identities can become more important or salient at different times or in different situations. For example, if a woman finds herself in a large room with many men and she is the only woman, her identity as a woman will become more salient than if she were in a room with all females.

Identity salience is important to discuss when considering atheism as an embattled, minority identity. Seifert exemplifies the formation of atheism as a salient part of some individuals’ identities in her article regarding “Christian privilege” (2007). Seifert introduces an idea that college students who identify as Christian in a heavily Christian-dominated society enjoy “Christian privilege,” defined as “the conscious and subconscious advantages often afforded the Christian faith in America’s colleges and universities” (2007:11). She explains that in some universities, Christian students are afforded privilege through having entire breaks planned around religious holidays like Christmas and through maintaining a predominant “Christian ethos” even though many universities no longer identify themselves in religious terms despite commonly religious foundations (Seifert 2007:11). In addition to the “formal privileges” that Christian (and other religious) students enjoy such as having the Christmas holiday off from school,[5] Seifert explains “informal privileges” that Christian students experience that can be applied to broader society. Many people, for example, have become accustomed to attributing behavior such as volunteering to being a “good Christian” or that these behaviors are “Christian” in nature (2007:12).

It may also be argued that Christian privilege has expanded to religious privilege in general. While college campuses seemed to once be seen as the bastions of science, reason, and secular thinking, Nash explains that today, religious pluralism on college campuses is booming while secularism and humanism are “in retreat” (2010:2). This is seen in the explosion of student-run and university-funded organizations for students of a variety of spiritual and religious affiliations (Nash 2010:2).[6] Nash explains, “Presently, it is the fashion on many campuses throughout America to celebrate religious difference and spiritual diversity, as a way of enlarging the meaning of multiculturalism” (2010:2). Edgell, Gerteis, and Hartmann also explain that in general, the increasing tolerance of religious pluralism may actually lead to an increasing intolerance of people who reject religion (2006:214). They explain:

Religious acceptance may be driven largely by assumptions that religious people, of          whatever faith, are ‘like me’ in two ways. In private life, they are understood to be moral         people, worthy of trust that is the basis for close personal relationships. In public life, the            boundaries that separate religious identities (for example, evangelical versus mainline           Protestant versus Catholic or Jew) are understood to be encompassed by and to constitute        a broader identity-being a good American. In such a setting, how do Americans view          those who reject religion, and what does that tell us about how Americans view their   nation and themselves? (2006:214)

 

Nash echoes this idea that college campuses are actually becoming less tolerant of atheists. He introduces the idea of “atheophobia” (the fear and hatred of atheists) that is “alive and well on college campuses” (2010:3). Bowman and Small explain in their study of college students and their spiritual development that “students from all faith backgrounds described a perceived three-tier structure of religious privilege in society with Christians at the top, atheists at the bottom, and other religions in the middle” (Bowman and Small 2010:599). This may cause atheist college students to feel as if their needs are not being met by universities or to feel uncomfortable and defensive about their beliefs in a highly religious social climate on college campuses (Bowman and Small 2010:599).

These privileges extended to religious students on college campuses along with the “theophile”-dominated social culture[7] exclude individuals who do not identify with the dominant or normative campus culture and create situations for students where they feel ignored or invisible if they do not identify as religious or spiritual (Siner 2007:14). However, the experience of Christian privilege (or religious privilege) by an atheist college student also creates opportunities for this non-religious identity to become more salient.

Siner (2007) uses this same idea of Christian privilege to explain the experiences, identity development, and salience of college students who do not identify as Christian. According to Siner, 21 percent of college students do not believe in God and are often seen in a negative light by their peers, being described as “bitter, mean-spirited, Satanic, immoral, empty, or ignorant” (2007:14). However, marginalization and judgment imposed on nonreligious students commonly leads to a greater importance in the irreligious aspect of the students’ identity. Siner explains that people have a multiplicity of identities, but some tend to be more salient or important than others at different times and places. He states that “oppressed, marginalized, and minority identity statuses tend to be more salient to an individual” while others fall to the periphery of one’s sense of self (2007:14). This can be likened to the Black Community, where many people experience the fact of being a person of color in a society that is predominantly white as a very salient part of their identity. Siner states: “Just as any minority identity is likely to be more salient, faith identity may be particularly salient to those students from minority religions that are not valued in the Christian-dominated culture of the United States” (2007:15).

 

 

III. College and Atheism

An interesting contradiction arises in the important works performed by both Smith and LeDrew in regard to the role of higher education in the making of an atheist identity. In Smith’s study, many of the participants did not begin to question their beliefs until college (Smith 2010). However, LeDrew makes an important reference to other research that shows that higher education might not cause apostasy (2013). Historical research by Caplovitz and Sherrow of “religious drop-outs” points to college as “a breeding ground for apostasy” (1977:109), saying that in their study of college students, more students, regardless of religious background, left college as apostates than the number of apostates who entered college (1977:109). This study indicates factors such as being away from families who would otherwise sustain religious beliefs and contact with new peer groups as factors that push students away from religious beliefs in college (1977:108). In a more recent study, Regnerus and Uecker take on the issue of college and apostasy, explaining that college itself may not be the reason that people choose to disaffiliate themselves from religion (2007:1). They state that many people who became irreligious often are a product of “processes set in motion long before young people ever set foot on a college campus: Those students who ‘lose their faith’ in college or drop out of organized religion after high school are primarily those already at considerable risk for doing so for other reasons that predate these actions” (2007:3). The authors thus reject the common belief that college is a secularizing force that turns people into atheists. As the authors suggest, there is little evidence for this today as much of the research that made this claim came out of the 1960s and 1970s, when the counterculture was at its strongest in U.S. universities (Regnerus and Uecker 2007:2).

Regnerus and Uecker (2007) explain that the commonly believed explanations for a lapse in at least outward religiosity may be due to the “secularizing tendencies of higher education” as well as “cognitive dissonance” that may result from activities such as drinking, having sex, or using drugs that deviate from religious teachings or parental guidance (Regnerus and Uecker 2007:1) Other reasons to temporarily abandon religion in college include logistical conflicts resulting from being faced with the responsibilities of young adulthood (2007:5) or adhering to norms that discourage a person from being too outwardly religious since “to appear over-religious can be the social kiss of death” (2007:4). Despite the lessening of outward religiosity, it is clear that many people remain privately religious, with four out of five students stating that they do not experience a diminishing religious salience during college years (2007:4). Regnerus and Uecker further questioned the assumption that college is the reason for deconversion or decreased salience of religion in young people, finding that while 64 percent of young people who went to church at least once per month decreased their attendance upon enrollment in a four-year institution, 76 percent of people the same age who never attended college curtailed their church attendance (2007:2). This suggests that religious disinterest probably occurs some time before college (or the typical college age). Other factors that lead to a decrease of salience in religiosity include cohabitation (which may imply sex before marriage), or other behaviors such as binge-drinking that are criticized by many religious traditions. However, these activities do not necessarily indicate a causation of secularity, but rather serve as a reflection of a secular orientation already present in the individual (2007:2).

IV. The Current Study

            As demonstrated above, the existing literature has focused on atheist identity formation in a social context and on the institution of college as (historically) a direct cause of religious rejection or (more recently) as a force that causes religious practice to temporarily go underground. In order to gain a more nuanced understanding of the identity formation and experiences of atheists outside of the group context as well as the role that college plays in these processes, the next chapters of this thesis will describe my own qualitative analysis I used to study college atheists. A chapter describing the research methods will first be described, followed by the findings of the study. My findings will be discussed and placed into the context of the existing research in my final chapters.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER 3: METHODS

 

            Before embarking on this research project, I worked with two University of Colorado (CU) offices. First, I obtained CU Internal Review Board (IRB) approval for my recruitment materials, study design, interview, and data-storage protocol. Second, I applied for and was awarded CU Undergraduate Research Opportunity Program (UROP) funding to cover my material costs and costs for providing interview participants with a small compensation.

I. Setting

This study was conducted at the University of Colorado in Boulder, Colorado. The university is home to approximately 25,000 students and is predominantly white with a slightly greater number of male than female students (“University of Colorado-Boulder” 2015). The city of Boulder is mainly composed of liberal, Democrat, upper-middle class, white, young, and physically active individuals. Notably, Boulder is one of the least religious towns in the United States with less than twenty percent of inhabitants claiming to be “very religious” (Florida 2013). It is not surprising that this city claims less religious inhabitants as information previously stated in my literature review points to the least religious people tending to be predominantly white, male, liberal, Democrat, and so on. The status of Boulder as one of the least religious cities in the United States proved to be very important in my informants’ responses, as many of them felt comfortable affirming their atheist identity in this supportive normative context.

II. Recruitment Process

Recruitment methods included presenting information about the study to undergraduate classes, writing on classroom chalkboards, distributing flyers, advertising in the weekly “Buff Bulletin” (an online publication that lists events, notices, services, and so on), presenting to an on-campus secular group, and through snowball sampling. In order to attract the most attention, recruitment materials included titles such as “Don’t Believe in God?” or “Are you a Godless Heathen?” The flyers (See Appendix A) included information about the study and my contact information. The flyers made explicit the parameters of the research, requesting participants who considered themselves to be atheist, were between the ages of 18 to 24, and who were current undergraduate students at the University of Colorado Boulder. The flyers also stated that participants would be compensated with a $10 gift card. Interested individuals called me on my personal cell-phone to schedule an interview or e-mailed me on an account that was set up specifically for the study. After conducting an interview, I would give the participant an extra flyer and copy of the consent form along with a $10 gift card. I would then ask him or her to pass along the information about my study to any other friends who were atheists and who might be interested in participating. One woman referred her friend to me, but most participants reported that they found out about the study through seeing advertisements on chalkboards in their classrooms. One student responded after hearing my presentation in a student-run skeptics club meeting.[8] One participant was recruited through a presentation to an on-campus academic journal organization,[9] and several other participants were acquaintances who expressed interest in participating.

III. Sample

            From September to December 2014, I conducted 14 semi-structured in-depth interviews. A sample size of 14 participants was large enough to yield data saturation and an ability to achieve a rich data set providing an understanding of atheist identity formation, atheist identity salience, and several other recurring themes among this college sample. Eight of the participants were women (six were men), with ages ranging from 18 to 23. The average age was 19.6 years, while the modal and median ages were 18 years and 19.5 years, respectively. Regarding class rank, the sample was bimodal, predominantly freshmen and seniors (6 freshmen, 1 sophomore, 2 juniors, and 5 seniors). There was a range of majors with an over-representation in the STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) fields, with ten participants having at least one major in one of those fields. Three of the participants had exclusively social science majors, and one was majoring in anthropology, which could encompass both natural and social sciences. Interview participants were “traditional” students at the university, meaning they followed a trajectory of entering their undergraduate education shortly after completion of high school and were on a four or five year track to finish their degree(s). Twelve of the participants were white, and two were bi-racial (Mexican-American and Japanese-American). The response rate was high, with 14 out of the 16 total respondents who contacted me participating in an interview. Most respondents contacted me over e-mail, and only two people who expressed interest over e-mail never responded. When I received an e-mail from an interested individual, I would reply within 24 hours and give them my phone number and more information about the study. If they did not respond within three days, I would send one follow-up e-mail.

IV. Interviews

During the interviews, my status as a college student helped me establish rapport with my participants, who were also students. Many of the participants also asked me about my own religious beliefs during the interviews. I answered them honestly, telling them that I, like them, am an atheist. As expected, this seemed to comfort many of the participants who may have otherwise not shared with me some of their reservations regarding organized religion and other personal beliefs. Since I was seen as part of the “in-group,” fellow stigma-bearer, or fellow sympathizer, it seemed that the participants’ knowledge of my own identity provided a more comfortable situation for them to share their experiences.

            Most of the interviews were conducted in the CU campus library in private, reserved study rooms (one interview was conducted at the participant’s home). This comfortable and private setting allowed participants to freely talk about their experiences. Consent forms (see Appendix B) were signed before beginning the interviews. An additional consent form was provided to audio-record the interviews for later analysis. All participants agreed to participate in the study and to be audio-recorded. The interviews ranged from approximately fifteen minutes to slightly over one hour, depending on how much the participants chose to expand on their responses to the interview questions. On average, the interviews lasted about one-half of an hour. The interview questions were used as a guide, but flexibility was allowed depending on the flow of the conversation. Some participants did not need any follow-up questions or probing and would answer some interview schedule questions prior to me asking them. Conversely, other participants provided limited responses until I used probes to acquire more complete responses.  

An interview schedule (see Appendix C) was used to structure the interview, but participants could expand on their experiences beyond what was in the interview guide. Further probing questions were asked in order to help clarify points or to provide a deeper understanding of the participants’ responses. The interview questions encouraged participants to take a narrative, conversational approach with an emphasis placed on their upbringing (religious or otherwise), family life, experiences with religion, experiences with atheism, and personal beliefs surrounding morality and what it means to be an atheist. Participants were asked to rate and explain the importance (salience) of their atheist identity in their lives and what role it played in family and other social settings and relationships. Questions were also asked regarding respondents’ perceptions of stigma,[10] with further probes added to see how the person coped with any perceived stigma or unacceptance. After the interviews were performed and recorded, they were transcribed verbatim in order to most accurately search for common themes. The participants’ actual names were substituted with pseudonyms in order to protect their anonymity. It is worth noting that although I told my participants that all names would be changed in my data transcriptions, analyses, and written reports, none of them were concerned about their identities being known and were fully willing to disclose their personal information.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER 4: FINDINGS

 

            The atheists in my study all proved to be individuals with nuanced views and varied ways of incorporating atheism into their daily lives and personal beliefs. After carefully combing through and coding my qualitative interviews with 14 CU student atheists, I identified three primary themes in my data: (1) precursors to atheism; (2) pathways to atheism; and (3) experiences with an atheist identity. All of these primary themes are further parceled into subthemes of the primary themes. Thus, this chapter of my thesis will elaborate on these three primary themes and their corresponding subthemes, providing examples through some of the participants’ quotes.

I. Precursors to Atheism: Backgrounds

            The first theme in my findings, Precursors to Atheism, includes the participants’ religious backgrounds and upbringings. This discusses the level of religiosity in their homes as well as their own personal levels of religious belief and religious practice. This theme is further parceled into the five subthemes that are common background or upbringing experiences of the study participants. The first subtheme, Church Attendance, explains the backgrounds of participants in terms of religious participation as children and adolescents. The second subtheme, Christianity as the Norm, describes the normative belief that many of the atheists had growing up with a specifically Christian tradition. The third subtheme, Obligation by Friends and Family, describes how many participants adhered to their parents’ (or grandparents’) religious beliefs and practices because they often had no other choice or because they felt obligated by their friend groups that were centered in the religious community. A discussion of participants’ experiences and opinions of their religious upbringings is included in the fourth subtheme: Experiences at Church. Finally, the fifth subtheme, A Background of Skepticism, describes participants who grew up in a household where religion was not emphasized, or where they had at least one parent who taught them to question or who gave them permission to seek out their own religious identities.

Church Attendance

            Regardless of the presence of actual religious belief during childhood, there was a relatively high religious practice frequency among my sample early in the participants’ lives. Twelve of the fourteen respondents reported going to church during their childhood, but with varying degrees of frequency. Four of my respondents reported attending a religiously affiliated school. Two respondents (Sophie and Mark) went to a Catholic school. However, Sophie (who grew up in an “open-minded” family with a very low rate of religious participation in the home) only attended Catholic school because she lived in an area with a poor public school system where the Catholic school was the only alternative. Although her family was not highly religious and only went to church on some holidays like Christmas, Danielle went to a Lutheran preschool. In addition to attending religiously affiliated schools, Aria and Mark both had very high religious practice frequencies. Aria went to a Quaker school, attended an Old Apostolic Lutheran Church, and participated in an intensive confirmation program one summer. Mark, who was raised a Catholic, went to mass every Sunday with his parents and frequently worked as a server in masses and at funerals.

            Three participants (Julie, Matthew, and Bethany) went to Sunday school every Sunday when they were young (Matthew went on Wednesdays and Sundays until he was 8 years old). Five participants (Edward, Jennifer, Dillon, James, and Karen) went to church sporadically as children, either only on holidays, or when their parents wanted to go. Karen only reported going to church with her grandparents when she stayed at their house. Brian was somewhat of an anomaly in the sample because he grew up in a secular home but went to church with his grandmother often because she played the organ at the services. He also became interested in religion later in his childhood and began attending youth groups until his sophomore year of college. Only one respondent (Cora) had a completely secular upbringing where she never attended church, although she did go to a friend’s youth group several times.[11]

Christianity as the Norm

            Of the 14 participants interviewed, 13 had at least some religious influence in their upbringing, whether it was in practice (going to religiously-affiliated events like church and youth groups) or in some level of a “normative” belief in God (Smith 2010:7). All respondents with any religious influence had specifically Christian influences in their childhoods, whether with actual religious practice, or simply labeling oneself as a Christian because it was seen as the normal thing to do. James, who was raised in a reportedly secular family with a “spiritual” mother and an atheist father (who lacked any spirituality or religious belief), said he considered himself to be a Christian during his childhood:

            I kind of took myself to be a Christian because it was the norm. And so, I kind of viewed everyone else as being that way as well. But not necessarily because I believed in         religious things. Just because that’s just the way it was, and that’s what I was taught, and             that’s how everyone else seemed to be.

 

When asked where he learned that being religious was the norm, James replied that these messages came from school, people around him, and his mother taking him to Sunday school several times to give him a chance to experience it and decide what he wanted to believe. James certainly felt a social pressure to believe in something, and remembered thinking during his childhood:

            There are so many people in the world that believe in a god that there must be one…It      was just kind of taken-for-granted. And really, it was thought that if you didn’t believe in   a god, that was pretty stupid because clearly you’re not paying attention to what the rest             of the world is believing.

            Karen grew up in a secular household but went to church sporadically when she stayed at her grandparents’ house. She said that before middle school, she adopted Christianity simply because she celebrated Christmas. However, she said, “It wasn’t really anything about the actual practices of the Bible. It wasn’t like ‘the Bible tells you to do this, and this, and this.’ It was ‘oh, we celebrate Christmas and it’s about Christ.’ ” Many respondents also reported feeling a sense of comfort in the idea of religion growing up. Jennifer, who grew up going to church on Easter and Christmas said:

            It’s just a nice thought when you’re a kid that your life means something. And when         you’re kind of learning about death as a kid, it’s a nice thought to have like ‘oh, your            grandpa is in heaven, and oh, they went on to a better place.’ I think it’s a nice,      comforting idea to have when you’re growing up and when you haven’t matured yet and   you don’t really have the capacity to understand what life is.

 

The idea of a heaven and an afterlife seemed compelling also to Julie, who was drawn to church and religion because she liked the idea of salvation and Heaven, saying: “When I did believe in salvation, or when I contemplated Heaven, I was like: ‘Yeah, that’d be cool. Chill up on a cloud…’ ” To many of the respondents, religion served as a comforting childhood idea that answered many often-difficult questions when they were younger about death and the meaning of life.

Obligation by Friends and Family

            When asked why respondents adhered to their family’s religious beliefs when they were growing up (if applicable), most respondents with religious backgrounds answered that it was because they were obligated to attend religious services and show outward signs of religiosity as a part of being a member of their family or because many of their friends were centered in the church community. Mark, who attended his Roman Catholic church regularly said that he believed in and followed Roman Catholicism “because they [my parents] did. One hundred percent. Because it was what was ingrained in me since I was zero years old.” Jennifer commented: “You listen to your parents when you’re growing up. When they make you do something, you do it.” Edward, Dillon, Matthew, Bethany, Danielle, and Mark all shared this sentiment, saying that they were given little to no choice in attending religious functions with their parents. Brian, Aria, and Julie cited both family and friend influences in going to church. Brian was an interesting case because although he had two parents who were not interested in religion at all, he was obliged to go to church with his grandmother, and later in his high school and early college years, he reported a high church attendance. Brian reported having a high religious practice frequency because of the social aspect of youth groups, saying:

            My friend group was centered entirely in the church at one point…I enjoyed the culture   and the friendship aspect of it far more than I felt any sort of personal relationship with Jesus or anything. I guess I would say I sort of defaulted to that as a condition of considering myself a Christian.

 

For Aria, whose mother had her at a very young age, the Old Apostolic Lutheran Church was compulsory because she was raised in part by her grandmother who stipulated church attendance as part of her upbringing. Aria also attended a Quaker school and between these two religious groups, she had a circle of friends that served as a large reason for continuing her church attendance.

Experiences at Church

            Some respondents reported enjoying many aspects of the church community growing up. Jennifer enjoyed getting dressed up and going out to eat as a family after a church service: “We always did fun stuff afterwards, like we’d go out to eat or something. So while it was a little bit boring there when I was younger, it was still kind of a special event, so you felt like it was a sacred thing that you were doing.” Brian expressed positive memories of attending church even though he did not have much of a choice when he was staying with his grandmother. He mentioned loving the music and the free cookies after the service. However, his enjoyment of church had nothing to do with the religious aspect of it and was mixed with irritation at his experiences at Sunday school. He remembered:

            They had a little Sunday school in the place, and my sister and I at one point went there   for like one week. And it was terrible! We just didn’t have a good time [laughs]. It was    annoying. They told us about this dumb Noah story, and it was stupid. And we had to     color. And I’d just rather sit and watch grandma play the organ because it was more   interesting.

 

            Matthew, who was obligated by his mother to go to church on Wednesdays and Sundays, reported very negative memories of church as a child: “I remember, I hated going to church because, I mean you have to wear the nice clothes all the time, you can’t get the clothes dirty. I remember my mama used to hit me a couple times if I spilled something on my clothes.” Other participants reported other examples of negative experiences with the church they attended, but these will be explained in a later section, as many of these experiences actually proved to be instrumental in the slow progression of these participants out of their religious beliefs and toward atheistic beliefs.         

A Background of Skepticism

            A final important trend in the backgrounds of participants was having at least one parent who was not religious or who taught the participant to question their beliefs (religious and otherwise) at an early age. Out of the fourteen participants, three had at least one parent who taught them to question their beliefs as children. Also, ten individuals had parents who were skeptical of religion themselves or who allowed their child the freedom to choose their own religious beliefs. Matthew, whose mother heavily stressed church attendance and religious belief, got a completely different message from his father, who himself was aggrieved at being forced to be a Christian by his parents while he was growing up. Matthew commented, “I mean, my daddy came up with the idea: ‘I don’t want to have to force my children to be the religion that I am, that my parents forced me to be.’ ” Matthew noted that his father would make fun of everything, including religion and emphasized to Matthew that he had a choice of what to believe: “He stressed choice. He stressed that every man has a choice to make…And that choice is never right nor wrong. It is his own.” This led Matthew to give up going to church when he was 8 years old, and to take seriously the choice that his father gave him to believe or not to believe in Christianity. Edward had a similar experience at home where his mother was the one who brought the family to church on occasion, but whose father did not feel strongly about religion although he was raised a Christian. Edward commented:

            He [my father] was raised a Christian, but he just neglected it. It wasn’t really an interest of his. So he didn’t pursue it. But he shares a lot of my views now too with it. A lot of          organized religion doesn’t make sense to us…My dad went to church because my mom    did.

 

For Edward, he and his father went to church because of his mother, but the indifference of Edward’s father clearly influenced Edward’s beliefs and vice-versa.

            Both of Dillon’s parents went through a questioning of religion phase when he was still living at home. Dillon remembered:

            They bought books like the Act of God and the Hand of God and How the Earth Came      to Be. And things about the universe and whatnot. And I wouldn’t say they pushed it on         me, but I flipped through the books, and we had discussions…It was always ‘you have to            make your own decisions and we’re not gonna make you think one way or the other.’  

 

Dillon and his family explored both religious belief and secularity, and he used these experiences to explore both religious and scientific explanations to questions he had. Karen and Sophie had similar relatively secular upbringings with unaffiliated parents. Sophie said that her parents never really spoke about religion, but told her that she could believe whatever she wanted. Karen mentioned that her father was forced as a child to go to church, and this influenced his decision to never make Karen go to church even though he expressed some interest in being a part of a community (religious or otherwise). Karen’s parents also raised her to be accepting of others and to question. They never answered her questions about religious matters however, asking her instead what she thought about it. Karen stated: “I guess my parents were never really explicit about their own beliefs. Like they just told me about their own backgrounds, like what they grew up doing.”

            Cora had an interesting background that was different from the other 13 participants in that she grew up in a specifically atheist household. Although Cora grew up in an extremely conservative, predominantly Evangelical Christian community, she was raised in an upper-middle class family with two liberal, atheist university professors. For her parents, teaching Cora and her brother to question at an early age was of the utmost importance in a context where faith-based thinking and high levels of religiosity was more prevalent in the public schools and in the community. Cora remembered:

            My parents raised my brother and myself with this mindset of always questioning. It was            a really open household, so if we had any questions, they would really answer them…[it         was] really important to my parents that my brother and I felt free to ask questions, but   they said you need to think critically and you should always ask for evidence and     shouldn’t take things based on faith value, which is good to keep in mind no matter what     you do, especially in college. If you’re going to say something, you should probably have             evidence to back it up.

 

It is important to note that Cora’s parents did not force her to be an atheist. If a friend invited Cora to a Christian youth group, her parents were excited for her, telling her that she should be open to everything.

II. Pathways to Atheism: “The Spark”

            The second primary theme, Pathways to Atheism, refers to the different experiences and processes participants had that precipitated a questioning phase or the direct adoption of an atheist identity. This primary theme included five subthemes. The first subtheme, “I never really believed any of it, describes the trajectory of atheists who never viewed themselves as religious in their childhoods, regardless of the presence of a religious upbringing. The second subtheme, Negative Experiences with Religion, describes participants who strayed from religion after perceiving experiences with their church or religious acquaintances as wrong, contradictory, or negative in some way. The third subtheme, Traumatic Experience, is where participants described negative experiences that happened to them early in life that set them on a course of questioning their religious beliefs. The fourth subtheme, Friends, explains the impact some of the participants’ friends had in the raising of doubts regarding the participants’ religious beliefs. The final subtheme, Questioning Beliefs and Losing Religion, is included in order to explain the step after the “spark” that many participants experienced where they questioned their beliefs. Two further sections are involved. The first, External Questioning, involves participants who went through a process of acquiring information about atheism and religion through seeking out information, and then making a conscious and rational decision to reject religious belief and adopt atheism. The second section, Internal Questioning, describes the experiences of people who still questioned their religious beliefs, but on an internal, personal level.

“I never really believed any of it”

            An interesting finding from my interviews is that many participants reported never truly believing in God. I asked respondents to rate their religious belief (a separate measure from religious practice frequency) on a scale of 1 to 10, with 10 denoting the most sincere and committed belief in God and in their religion. Only two respondents rated religious belief over a 5 at the most religious point in their lives. Jennifer, who only attended church occasionally and who grew up in a household where religion was rarely a topic of conversation, rated her most religious point as a 3 or 4 until she was around 13 years old. She remembered feeling indifferent about religion in general and not being sure of whether or not to believe in God. In fact, although Jennifer’s parents sometimes attended church, they expressed opposition to people being extremely religious, and thus steered Jennifer away from attending youth groups as a child. Edward rated himself as a 3 or 4 at his most religious point when he was age 4 or 5. He remembered believing Bible stories simply because he liked them. He followed with the comment: “I believed in magic and stuff as a kid. Now I believe less in magic [laughs].” When asked if he ever felt any closeness to God, James, who attended Sunday school a handful of times, responded:           

            [At Sunday School] I always pretended that I was praying, but I could never figure out     what they were actually getting at. They always wanted me to connect with something,           and I was always waiting for some voice to answer me while I’m saying stuff in my head,             and I never heard anything…But it wasn’t like I believed or knew anything about       scripture or took it very seriously.

 

Matthew commented that when he was a child, he would go through the motions of praying to God, but only when he got in trouble, saying, “God, pull me a favor. I don’t want to get in trouble today.” Matthew later stated that he never truly believed in God saying, “I never wrapped my head around it, that there was something more than what was here.” For Matthew, there existed a religious socialization in his family centered around religious practices like praying and attending church. Although Matthew participated in these practices, he could never make himself truly believe.

            For all of the participants, even a minute level of religious belief did not last, almost as if religious belief was a childhood phase. Bethany, who grew up in a conservative Christian household, reaffirmed this idea of religiosity being likened to a phase that one eventually grows out of, saying:

            I find it fascinating to see how these people can devote their lives to this religion. And       especially since I…felt like I almost grew out of Christianity. Like it was just like this            phase when I was little. And to see these people that don’t grow out of it [laughs]. Like    these large masses of people that still believe in it is just really interesting to find out why.           That’s what interests me. And to see what they get out of it. Because I felt like I didn’t get much out of it. 

 

 

 

Negative Experiences with Religion

 

            Several respondents mentioned negative experiences with members of their religious community or religious family members as a reason for beginning a questioning process of their faith. Bethany grew up in a conservative Christian family that went to church every Sunday. Bethany explained that her family got kicked out of the Catholic Church when she was about six years old because her mother did not convert to Catholicism. At the next church she attended, the pastor got fired and disowned by the community due to an affair scandal. She also cited her parent’s intolerant beliefs as reasons for her questioning. She said, “As a got I little bit older, I was always pretty accepting of people from other religions. My parents weren’t [laughs]. Yeah, like especially my dad. I mean, basically like ‘Christian’ and ‘good person’ were synonymous to him. And so, that part…I never really understood that…” She also said that both of her parents thought people of other religions were confused and did not know the truth. Bethany remembered being skeptical of this, saying, “How do I know that this [religion] is right, but then all these other people in the world are wrong?”

            Aria explained her experiences at the Old Apostolic Lutheran Church as a child. She remembered being appalled by the treatment of women in the church, saying: “Women aren’t allowed to cut their hair, or you’re not allowed to watch TV. Women aren’t supposed to go to school.” Women also had to cover their heads with a scarf after they were confirmed in the church. Aria said that as a small child, she did not mind going to church with her grandmother, but then as she got older, she would think, “This is horrible. This is oppressive.” Eventually, when she was around the ages of 10 to 14, in a small act of defiance during church services, she would pull off her headscarf if she disagreed with the pastors:

            It was my own little form of protest. And so I would say there was some antagonism       towards organized religion in that form for me…And I would say that questioning God         was a lot easier for me because of the Old Apostolic Lutheran Church. Because I was        like, there’s no way this was right. And this belief that these people have…it can’t be           right. So they would say things like, ‘we are the true Israelites…everyone else is going to         Hell. All of the Catholics are going to Hell; all of the other Lutherans are going to Hell.       Definitely the Jewish people are going to Hell.’ To me…maybe because the teachings      were so intense…And that’s where the questioning began because…you’re not supposed             to have friends from the world. That’s what you’re called if you’re not in the church:     ‘from the world.’

 

Interestingly, Aria’s very positive experiences with the Quakers from attending a Quaker school made her more skeptical of religion in general. Because she had the two influences: one very accepting and liberal, and one very oppressive and conservative, she opted for the critical thinking and questioning taught by the Quakers, eventually rejecting religious belief and a belief in God entirely.

            Interestingly, Brian was the only participant who continued religious practice and some level (albeit very low) of religious belief into his college years. Brian attended Wednesday Bible studies in college until his sophomore year. He said that upon the first week of going to a Presbyterian church, “two things happened that sort of were the catalyst for the whole house of cards to come down.” Apparently, the youth pastor at the church with whom Brian was very close was forced out of the church because of her unconventional style of teaching. Brian explained, “She was very passionate, and she was not afraid to address difficult topics. She would talk about sex and cursing in a very real and tangible way. She was sort of more in touch with the world than the head pastor of the church.” Brian explained that her contract was changed to the point that her pay was cut in half, essentially forcing her to resign. In the same week, Brian also heard that one of the staff members from the church he attended in high school had been fired because he was gay. This, according to Brian was the last straw. He said, “I had come to realize that the church was fallible, and that was pretty much all it took for the entire house of cards to come down. And I just started asking questions and researching. And I read quite a bit on the topic over the course of two years from both sides.”

            Mark was also heavily influenced by negative experiences with religion. Mark described going to Roman Catholic mass every Sunday and attending a Catholic grade school. Mark developed reservations about the establishment of the church and power structure within the Catholic church when he got confirmed:

            When we got confirmed, they were telling us that we had to bow and kiss the ring of the   Bishop. And it just infuriated me! No one is better than me, in terms of that I need to kiss      their ring! And why should the person be the vassal for an omnipotent creature?

 

Mark also described noticing a spiritual difference between himself and the other members of his church saying, “I couldn’t get all spiritual and be so devout…I have a problem with super conservative beliefs.”

            Cora, although never having a religious belief nor growing up in a religious family, had a phase of questioning sparked by a negative experience with religion when she was in middle school. In sixth grade, Cora remembered that a classmate told her that she was going to Hell because she was not religious and her parents were atheists. Some parents of her friends in grade school also would not let her come over to their houses for the same reason. Also, during her eighth grade year, Cora had a science class where the theory of continental drift was explained. Cora remembered that the teacher described the scientific theory, but then told the class that what really happened was that “God’s hands came down and separated the continents. And that’s the theory just like the scientific theory.” Cora explained how appalled she was about the lack of separation between church and state. She said that up until this point in her life, she was not “mature enough or had enough background knowledge to really start thinking about [atheism].” After these negative experiences with religious people however, Cora began to become very interested in the debate between religion and atheism, realizing: “I need to start standing up for this.”

 

Traumatic Experience

            Some participants cited experiencing a life-changing event that made them question their religious beliefs, and especially their belief in God, reporting that if there was a god, it did not make sense for there to be evil and suffering in the world. Bethany cited both negative experiences in the church as well as her conservative parents’ intolerant views of others as reasons for her skepticism of religion. Moreover, the trauma of her parents’ divorce when she was 15 essentially shattered most of her childhood religious beliefs. Bethany remembered:

            I mean, a lot of stuff was changing in my life then…And since I was questioning    everything and religion had been such a big part of my life, I just started questioning that          too. And I mean, there was also the part where if there is a god and he’s supposed to be    good, then why is all this happening to me?

 

After the divorce of her parents, which Bethany describes as a “turmoil,” Bethany’s entire worldview changed. She said:

            I would go to church with her [my mother]. At that point I sort of started to see…how,    you know, judgmental they were. And the more negative aspects of it. And so, then I   started to question, why do I identify with these people? And, just thinking back to all the           negative experiences that I told you before about church and everything. And then I just           started on my own, just researching other religions, And just figuring out…and I even             talked to some of my atheist friends too…And so I guess after all of that, then I just kind             of realized that I actually don’t agree with this religion that I’ve been practicing my whole life.

 

            Matthew also experienced trauma at an early age when his friend died. According to Matthew:

            He died when I was young. And it made me think if there is somebody who is all- powerful who can save anybody, who can kill any person, why would He let us die? And       it was that point I was like, there must not be anything or, I mean, if He’s better than us, He [God] wouldn’t let people die. So that was the big revelation.

 

For both Bethany and Matthew, life-changing experiences made them question the beliefs with which they had been raised. For Bethany, the divorce of her parents made her begin to question everything she had ever been taught, while for Matthew, the death of his friend seemed to be more of an affirmation of his suspicions that there was no God.

Friends

            For some participants, friends in school were the most instrumental in setting a path of questioning for the participants. Julie grew up in a single-parent household and was very involved in the church community (going to Sunday school every Sunday), although she said her beliefs in God and Christianity were mainly out of fear of going to Hell. In fifth grade, she stopped going to Sunday school because her best friend also stopped going. Julie commented:

            It was a motivation between us two. It was almost like a competition. Like who is more    Christian than the other. So that was like some of the motivation I had to go. And as soon   as her interests turned, mine started to as well, and I decided not to keep up on it…There             for a while, my mom would make me go to church on Easter, with my grandma and          everything, and I was like, ‘this is stupid. I don’t want to hear anything about this.’             Like yes, they’re good messages, but I just felt that they were…misinformed.

 

After she stopped going to church, Julie entered a “rebellious phase” when she was 12 and 13, listening to death metal and being “gothic.” She mentioned that being in the gothic crowd implied being a Satanist, which she did not want to identify with, saying:

            Just because I don’t like what Christianity teaches doesn’t mean I have to go to the polar opposite…there could be a common ground. And that’s when I discovered atheism…and        then, yeah, science kind of stepped in...atheism just is more appealing for me. I guess the main appeal was I wasn’t gonna get judged for not believing in salvation…or not          believing in the devil as well.

 

For Julie, atheism served as the “middle ground” between her religious upbringing and her social group who were Satanists. For Julie, there did not seem to be a questioning phase that followed her rejection of Christianity and Satanism, but rather an adoption of atheism and the contentment that came with getting her questions answered with science.

            Although Mark was skeptical about some of the more traditional and conservative practices in his Roman Catholic church, he said that up until high school, he was still a devout Catholic (though with a relatively weak belief in God) and “would have defended Catholicism.” It was not until one of Mark’s friends began introducing him to new ideas around his sophomore year of high school that Mark began questioning his beliefs. Mark explained:

            My friend, my good friend now, who is a year older than me, started talking a lot. And     he’s not atheist at all, but he has some crazy beliefs. Always changing his mind…I             always loved reading. I knew all about these different things…so he would tell me             all these things, and I would look into them… all this spiritual science, all this      pseudoscience… And then sort of day-by-day, I’d read different sources. So, it didn’t      take me long to get rid of Christianity, to say I’m no longer Catholic, but it took me a     little bit longer to come to myself and be like, ‘Alright, yeah, I believe I’m an atheist. I          am an atheist.’

 

Mark went on to explain that although his friend was never an atheist, his strange views about conspiracy theories, eastern religion, Buddhism, and so on, made Mark open to beliefs other than the ones with which he had been raised. The friend being interested in far-fetched beliefs had a large impact on Mark allowing himself to begin the questioning process of his own religion, which eventually led him to become an atheist.

Questioning Beliefs and Losing Religion

            Many of the participants reported numerous influences in their final adoption of an atheist identity. Never truly believing in God or religion, having negative experiences with religion or religious people, experiencing a traumatic event, and being influenced by friends all were common threads that were seen among my participants.[12] After experiencing certain events, some participants were “sparked” into a questioning phase (although some went straight from the “spark” to adopting atheism without a questioning phase) that was described just briefly in some of the quotations above. For many, this questioning period involved reading a variety of sources about God and religious belief as well as atheism. Not all participants went through an externally visible questioning phase of researching religion or irreligion, but it certainly was a common trend. Another trend among people who questioned themselves was a less visible and more internal personal questioning that led to the adoption of an atheist identity.

External Questioning

            Of the 14 participants, Brian underwent perhaps the most dramatic questioning phase. After his youth leader was fired for encouraging questioning attitudes from her youth group and a staff member from Brian’s childhood church was fired for being gay, Brian repeated several times that the “whole house of cards came down.” He said that after these two events occurred during his sophomore year of college, he began reading literature from “both sides,” and did so for two years. Brian explained:

            I read a lot of Peter Kreeft, the Christian apologist. I read basically every book by Lee       Strobel, who is a converted- a reconverted atheist, I suppose you would say. And I read C.S. Lewis, but I also read Dawkins, Dennett, Harris, and Hitchens. And I just came to     realize that they [the atheists] had much more contact with reality. They had a lot more tangible arguments. I was watching debates on YouTube and listening to Podcasts on             both sides, so I just kind of mainlined information into my head for about two years. And             by the end of it, I was beyond convinced….after a while it was like reading the same       book over and over again, hearing the same arguments that had been put to bed over and    over again…I guess that was sort of the deconversion story in a nutshell.

 

Brian’s questioning and research period was very long, and through a highly methodical process, he rejected religion and God and adopted an atheist identity by the time he was a junior in college.

            Although Bethany described a period of questioning beliefs after her parents’ divorce when she was 15, she did not fully adopt an atheist identity until her freshman year of college.  She explained that she began actively gathering information that she had previously ignored on a variety of topics including other religious beliefs and atheism. She describes beginning a process of researching other religions and talking to some of her friends who were atheists just to understand their points of view on religion and Christianity in general. She also remembered having conversations with her brother who adopted an atheist identity as well (interestingly, the two of them came to the same conclusions independently of one another). Upon entering college, Bethany took a philosophy class that presented various arguments for and against the existence of God. This sparked further questioning where Bethany began to read more articles for and against God and became convinced with “all the evidence against God” that there was no God.  

            Aria began questioning her religious beliefs as young as fourth grade, sparked by her experiences in the Old Apostolic Lutheran Church. The church’s intolerant, rigid beliefs were in direct conflict with the very accepting views of the Quaker school that taught Aria to be a critical thinker and that the “truths that people tell you aren’t necessarily ultimately truth.” Aria’s outward questioning and dissidence in the church was demonstrated through her open form of protest where she would pull off her headscarf in the middle of a church service. Aria later came to reject all of the beliefs with which she had been brought up at the Old Apostolic Lutheran Church and went a step further to reject a belief in God entirely.

            During her questioning period when she was 12 or 13, Julie said that she began to realize a trend that led to her adoption of atheism. She remembered studying medieval times and noticing that whenever people could not explain something like a drought, they would often attribute the event to an act of God. Julie remembered realizing that religion and God were a “theory for everything” that people did not understand or that they could not explain. Julie came to reject religious explanations for events and began to adopt atheism and scientific reasoning as better explanations for natural events and her questions.

 

Internal Questioning

            A common trend among people who were less personally religious growing up but who accepted a “normative” belief in God, was undergoing a less outwardly visible questioning phase where they tended to simply question the normative belief they had and eventually reject it without doing heavy research, protesting against religion, or seeking out other atheists. James was a good example of this trajectory. He said that although his beliefs were in line with atheism since he was in middle school, he did not describe himself as an atheist until the very end of high school or the beginning of college. James said that he was in middle school when he began to think that the things he had learned about religion in Sunday school and from his religious friends were “kind of silly.” James said that he “rationally” came to the conclusion that there was no God because that seemed to be the most logical conclusion to him. 

            Danielle also described a type of personal questioning. She said that she first became aware of atheism when she stayed with a friend whose entire family was atheist. That was the first time Danielle came across the idea that she did not have to believe in anything. Around eighth grade, Danielle solidified her identity as an atheist after her experiences of questioning whether or not there truly was a higher being. For Danielle, a failure to experience God served as a catalyst for her rejection of a religious belief. She remembered trying to pray, nothing happening, and subsequently concluding that God did not exist.

            Jennifer experienced oscillation between religious and irreligious beliefs as a child, but described a point in high school when she concluded that there was no God. She admitted that she could not identify exactly what triggered this revelation. She went to a youth group with some of her Mormon and Christian friends and said: “Church just started giving me the heebie-jeebies. I just was really uncomfortable there, just because I felt like they were just kind of lying to me. People were just up at the pulpit, just lying.” She said that she became very interested in science in high school, and that the more she learned about evolution, the more it made her feel like the world did not need a god. Jennifer stated: “There’s so much science and so many things we know about the world, and so much beauty just in nature and biology and physics, and…how this world works, that I didn’t feel like there needed to be a god.” She also took a high school class called the Theory of Knowledge, which emphasized theories of how humans know what they know. In the class, Jennifer described feeling very negatively about religion when she learned about “all the oppressive things that happened out of religion” in this specific class. All of these factors culminated, as Jennifer stated, “I think all those things: the science, the growing up, some of the atheist friends, not liking church…it all kind of pushed [me]…it was a very gradual thing for me to go like, ‘maybe [there is a god]’ to ‘no, there is no God.’ ”

III. Experiences with an Atheist Identity

            The third primary theme, Experiences with an Atheist Identity, encompasses the lived experiences of college atheists after they adopted their atheist identity. This primary theme is further divided into the subthemes: Atheism Personally Defined, Atheist Identity Salience, and Perceptions of Stigma. In the first subtheme, Atheism Personally Defined, participants expand on their own personal definitions of what it means for them to be an atheist. The second subtheme, Atheist Identity Salience, constitutes the importance of atheism to the participants’ identities. The third subtheme, Perceptions of Stigma, covers the participants’ awareness of a stigma surrounding their atheist identity, if any, and how accepted participants felt as they navigate the social world as an atheist. The last two sections: Coping with Stigma: Redefining Friend Groups and Controlling Information and Coping with Stigma: Redefining Morality describe the two main ways that college atheists cope with a sometimes unaccepting society, how they are able to find accepting friend groups, and how they define (or redefine) themselves as moral people who are undeserving of a cultural stigma.

Atheism Personally Defined

            When defining what atheism meant in terms of a personal definition, most participants mentioned that atheism at its most basic level is a lack of a belief in God. Most respondents also added that it is a rejection of any religion. James stated simply: “At its most basic level, I think it [atheism] means that you don’t believe that there is a god. And I think that can mean different things to different people, but I think at its base level, that’s what it is.” Bethany stated: “I think to be an atheist is to not practice any religion. To not identify with any religion. And to not believe in any sort of god or other supernatural being.” Danielle’s definition was: “I don’t believe that there is a higher power or a man in the sky or whatever.” She also added, “But, I don’t judge anyone who believes that.” Aria also added this sentiment of a non-judgmental, personal belief to her definition of atheism, echoing that she does not believe in God, but adding that she does not feel compelled to tell people about this belief or to force it on other people. Several participants added this caveat of not wanting to push their atheism onto other people, mainly because they felt resentful of religious people who try to push their beliefs.

            Some respondents had more involved and personal answers of what atheism meant to them based on science or other reasoning outside of religion. Jennifer, an evolutionary biology and secondary science education major responded:

            I think being an atheist means not believing in any higher being. That, like what you see     on earth is what you get. There’s nothing after and there’s nothing before. You’re not      here for a specific reason. There’s no one up there who has a plan for you and has a plan for the world. The world just…it is…I think because I’m a scientist, I very much believe        in just the natural way of things. When you die, maggots eat ‘ya! You decompose [laughs]. And I think atheism has become this thing where you’re kind of combative             against people who are religious, and I don’t necessarily agree with that…I really try not to be combative.

 

To Edward, morality outside of religion informed his definition of atheism:

            It’s to write your own moral code. Like the definition of atheism is to be, like if I were to look it up, it would be to abandon God. But to me, it’s to abandon the Bible and to write           your own moral codes and write your own beliefs and philosophies. A lot of it has to be   based on what you see and what you learn from the world…[to] start from square one and       start writing everything over from the beginning.

 

For Edward, atheism and adopting an atheist identity was very much about reinventing himself and the way he viewed morality and the world. His analogy of “starting from square one” implied that his atheism made him reevaluate everything he thought he knew about the world from a more critical, scientific standpoint than the religious, faith-based philosophies with which he had grown up.

            Most participants also added something about the rejection of religion in general and that atheism implies critical thinking to their definitions of atheism. Cora stated that atheism is “not believing in a god or any gods…it’s looking at anything with a critical eye. So, for me, I don’t take things based on faith value; I want to know why something is this way. I love to ask questions…” Cora also made an interesting point that atheists and religious people are not as different as they may seem, saying atheists are defined based on what they do not believe in, but that “any religious person could be considered an atheist because…the only god they do accept is their own, and so in any other religion, they’d be considered an atheist…I believe in one less god than they do, which doesn’t separate us by much, but they don’t like to hear that.”

            Notably, two participants did not even mention a lack of belief in a god as a defining feature of atheism. Sophie stated: “I think for me, it means just keeping an open mind. Just not believing in anything that comes by, but also really deeply thinking about anyone’s opinions. Yeah, bottom line, keeping an open mind.” Julie’s definition was very similar: “To be an atheist to me is to definitely accept everyone’s religions…Also what atheism means for me is [to] educate yourself on all other religions and obviously science as well. So to me, atheism is just learning as much as you can about everything.” These were two interesting responses because instead of citing a lack of a belief in God, the two women described atheism as encompassing characteristics such as acceptance, open-mindedness, knowledge, and knowledge of other religions as defining features of atheism. These specific features are undoubtedly characteristics of many religious people, but it was interesting that these two respondents saw them as stereotypical of atheists. Brian also underlined the stereotype of atheists as open-minded and scientific saying: “I find that if somebody is an atheist, there’s a high likelihood that I will find them an interesting person because chances are, they are intellectually honest and intellectually curious.” This was an interesting finding indicating that atheists themselves make generalizations and have stereotypes about other atheists. These included assuming that all atheists develop this identity through reason, curiosity, critical thinking, and so on, and that the antithesis to atheism is  accepting any belief based on faith, which is a common stereotype of religious people held by some atheists.

Atheist Identity Salience

            The importance of atheism as an identity or as part of participants’ identities varied greatly. In order to get an idea of how important an atheist identity was to participants, I asked each one to rate the importance of atheism to their identity on a scale of 1 to 10, with 1 being not at all important and 10 being the most important. If respondents did not feel that a scale captured their feelings about their atheist identity importance, I allowed them to explain it to me differently. A majority of the respondents (10 of the 14) rated atheism as being a very important part of their identity with ratings of 7 or higher (or saying that it was “important” or “very important”). Four of the participants rated the salience of their atheism between 3 and 4 (or “not important”). These responses will be expanded upon in the two following sections.

 Atheist Identity as “Very Important”

            Jennifer rated atheism as a salient part of her identity as a 10, saying:

            I think it’s very important to me in the sense that I think about it a lot, and it’s a big part of my life, just because I spend so much time doing science, and I like that I don’t have to            reconcile the scientific part of myself with a religious side because I don’t have      one…And I think it’s made me more confident in some ways in how I move about the   world just because once you realize that you’re on your own, in a certain sense, I think     you can be very purposeful and very…confident in how you make decisions.

 

Cora similarly rated atheism as very important to her identity (8-9), also saying that with an atheist belief, she does not have to reconcile science and religion. Cora stated: “I feel like if I did have beliefs that were more on faith, it would be harder for me, especially in the sciences. So, I think that having that evidence-based kind of belief system or acceptance has really helped me…so I think that’s why it’s really important to me.”

            Edward rated his atheist identity as an 8, saying it “grounds a lot of the decisions I make. And I don’t go around making decisions like ‘what would an atheist do?’ I just have written my moral code along the lines of who I am, and who I am also happens to be along the lines of being an atheist.”

            James based his answer on of an idea of rationality, rating his atheism as a 7 (out of 10) in importance to his identity. He said that he did not feel strongly enough about his atheism to join an activist group (which is what he would consider to be a 10), but he stated:

            I also think that a lot of who I am is based on my idea of rationality and thinking about     things in a certain rational way. And I think that’s a big part of it is how you see yourself      in relation to the rest of the world and other people…So I’d say atheism is a topic that     really does a good job of representing how I think about the world.

 

Mark also mentioned rationality in his description of atheism as being “very important” to his identity. He described wanting to gather knowledge and information, saying, “atheism is huge for me because I’m rational and, you know, this is just part of who I am. Huge. Huge part of who I am.”

            In contrast to his peers who answered that their atheism was very important to them, Brian rated his atheism as a 2 in importance to his identity, but rated his skepticism as a 10 saying:

            That’s the main way I interact with the world. It just depends as what you mean by         atheism. So atheism in a vacuum is not extraordinarily important to me. I just happen to      think it’s true. I also happen to think fairies and unicorns don’t exist. I’m exactly as          passionate and as firm in my beliefs against fairies, leprechauns, and the tooth fairy as I         am against Yahweh. If you take atheism as a stand-in for skepticism and having a             realistic outlook, then it’s extraordinarily important.

 

This reveals an important distinction that not all atheists see their nonbelief as extremely important, but that their certain way of thinking about life (that one could define as skepticism, atheism, humanism, freethinking, and so on) simply differs from the norm of religious belief or faith. In this sense, semantics mattered for the participants, but the most important concept was establishing that their identity and worldview are informed by science, reasoning, and so on, rather than a non-belief in God.

Atheist Identity as “Not Very Important”

            Of the participants that rated their atheism as not an important part of their identity, most stated that the lack of importance was due to an overall lack of importance of religion as a topic in their lives. For Karen, her atheism is not important because she said that she never really thinks about it, saying: “It’s just not really a big part of my life. It’s like, why would I make a non-belief a big part of my life? It seems counterintuitive.” For Aria, it is very important that people do not see her as an Old Apostolic Lutheran, but she stated that it is not at all important that people know she is an atheist because it is not a part of her “core identity.” Aria explained,  “It’s just, you know, just one of my beliefs. Like my political beliefs or anything like that.” Dillon said that he does not define himself in relation to other people’s religious beliefs and that he is not influenced by others’ ideologies. He stated that atheism too is very low in importance to his identity. 

Perception of Stigma

            Just as there were variations in how the atheist students defined atheism when referencing their own specific beliefs, there were variations of how accepted people felt in society as atheists. Several people experienced varying degrees of unacceptance from individuals and from society in general due to the general stigmas that surround an atheist identity. This section will discuss the experiences of individuals encountering various forms of acceptance and unacceptance from their family, friends, and society and will later explain the ways that individuals coped with perceived stigma.

            In order to understand how participants navigate the world with a minority identity and if they perceive any stigma as attached to this identity, I asked a variety of questions in order to gain an understanding of how accepted these people felt as atheists by other individuals as well as society. The concept of acceptance was a way to operationalize perceived stigma with the idea being that levels of perceived unacceptance would translate to feelings of being stigmatized. I did not ask a direct question if participants felt that their identity as an atheist was stigmatized because I wanted to allow them to explain their experiences rather than run the risk of projecting an idea onto them that they might not experience. All participants that were interviewed had informed their parents of their identities and many of their friends. Many individuals cited Boulder or the university campus as overall accepting settings, but said that they might feel unaccepted if they lived in different areas.

            When asked if she felt accepted by society as an atheist, Cora answered: “I would say more and more. I think too though, as within college and then in graduate school, the people are more liberal….I think liberals generally are more open-minded, so especially being in Boulder, it has not been hard for me to say I’m an atheist…” She explained that in the city in which she grew up, which was predominantly conservative and Evangelical Christian, she felt less accepted since she lost friends because she had different religious beliefs. Aria also mentioned academia as a very accepting place for atheists. Although she cited feeling like she had to defend her atheist identity around her boyfriend’s religious family and around her grandmother who would prefer that she went to church, Aria said that she generally feels accepted by the academic community and by society as a whole.  

            When asked about how accepted she felt by society and individuals, Karen stated that she felt as if the atheist part of her identity is often under attack by individuals and society because “you see stuff that’s like, ‘you can’t have morals without a religious background.’ ” Although Karen said she feels comfortable with her atheist identity and has told her parents, she still has not told her grandparents, saying that they would be “upset” and “nothing really good would come out of bringing it up.” Otherwise, Karen had a positive overall feeling about the level of societal acceptance, saying that she feels accepted and especially among younger people. This may also be because Karen does not choose to talk about her nonbelief, saying that it is not a large part of her life. Dillon also felt accepted in general by his family and society as an atheist, but then added that he also does not talk about religion on a daily basis anyway. He also mentioned that he might feel differently outside the college environment, saying “if you go out into society and you start taking with elders or your other cohort within your work environment, if your beliefs don’t match up with the majority of the beliefs, you might be discriminated against. I have not personally had that experience, but I’d imagine it’s out there.”

            Unfortunately, some participants did feel some level of fallout upon informing their family members of their rejection of religion and adoption of atheism. Bethany said that her mom was “a little bit sad that I had adopted that [atheism]. Just because she had spent so much time trying to raise me as a Christian.” She also does not have contact with her father, but said that he would likely be very unaccepting of her new identity. Apart from her parents, Bethany felt generally accepted by society, especially in Boulder. She added a disclaimer that she had not identified as an atheist for long, implying that she may feel differently as she spends more time in society with this particular identity.

            Jennifer also said that her mom was “bummed out” upon finding out about Jennifer’s atheism although her father was fully supportive. She also mentioned that her religious grandmother does not know because Jennifer has simply avoided opening up “that can of worms.” It seemed as if Jennifer felt more accepted as an atheist in areas and situations outside of her family where there remained some uncomfortable feelings surrounding her identity. She mentioned Boulder as a supportive context, saying, “Boulder is a very good place to be an atheist. I think it’s almost like a popular thing. It’s more common in some ways than being religious.” Jennifer also mentioned the university setting as largely accepting and especially in her niche of an evolutionary biology lab which according to her, is a sort of atheist microcosm where most scientists in the lab are openly atheist.

            James reported feeling accepted as an atheist by his father, who he suspects is also an atheist, but feels slightly different about his mother, saying: “My mom, I don’t think really completely believes that I am [an atheist]. Although I think she’s fine with me believing whatever I want to. But I think she’s in denial of what I really am.” James acknowledges his identity as stigmatized, but said that he is able to get by because religion does not come up in routine conversations. He commented: “I don’t feel like it’s [the atheist identity] under attack on a daily basis because I don’t think it really comes up, but I think that’s because it’s a stigmatized topic…” James mentioned a fear of discrimination by potential employers based on his atheist identity, saying that he keeps this information off of social media pages like Facebook.

            Mark also had similar experiences to James, as his parents seemed to be in denial over his atheist identity. Mark seemed to have the most difficulty of all the participants interviewed informing his Roman Catholic family of his atheist identity. He said that he felt attacked by his parents and his whole family. When he first came out to his parents as an atheist, they forced him to continue attending church, saying: “You still live in our house.” Mark responded by writing an essay to them about his beliefs. Eventually they stopped making him go to church, and his father eventually accepted him. However, his mother was apparently “worse. Much, much worse.” Mark stated, “My mom still has this hope that I’ll turn the corner, and one day I’m just going to show up at the door and be like ‘I’m Catholic again!’ I don’t know. I think it’s a little far-fetched, but it’s alright. Whatever helps them sleep at night [laughs].” Although Mark has told many of his cousins and other family members about his atheism, he has not told his grandparents saying, “I love them too much.” Mark’s aunt reacted poorly to his transition to atheism, questioning the possibility of morality without a belief in God. He stated, “They [atheists] are mistrusted. They are…Apparently no one believes that anyone can have their own moral compass. It’s too bad.” He explained that his aunt “doesn’t understand how people can be moral without religion. Greatly upsetting. Because then it makes her [think] that humans must be so weak-minded that they can only act rightly out of fear…I think we should be able to act right out of what’s good inside of us.” On a societal level, Mark feels that he could never come out publicly as an atheist if he wanted to run for public office, saying: “I would feel entirely more accepted in Europe. I feel like if I ever did something major and came out as atheist, there would just be huge backlash…if I did that in America. One hundred percent.”

            Matthew said that his mother wished that he were still a Christian, although this fact is not a point of contention in their household. He also did not tell his grandparents about his identity “out of respect.” Matthew said that he was sure his grandparents would still love him if they knew, but that they would undoubtedly “prefer” that he was a Christian. Matthew raised this idea of “preference” by describing how he does not feel completely accepted in society as an atheist. He explained, “Does society wish I wasn’t an atheist? Completely. I believe they [society] wished that I believed in some religion….One of the things is that…certain [political] parties would never accept me for being an atheist. So while society will accept that I’m an atheist…they will always try to change [me].”

            Brian mirrored this idea of his family “preferring” that he was not an atheist. His whole family is aware of his atheism and Brian said they still love him saying: “It’s not like they don’t show me the same affection that they show the other cousins. It’s just sort of like passive aggressive. It’s sort of like ‘I’d really prefer if you weren’t an atheist, but I still love you.’ ” These examples show that although many participants do not experience dramatic consequences for their atheism such as being disowned as a family member, there is still a discomfort that accompanies an atheist identity that many respondents expressed.          

Coping with Stigma: Redefining Friend Groups and Controlling Information

            Many atheists interviewed coped with stigma by surrounding themselves with like-minded people, often other atheists. Cora mentioned that most of her friends are liberal, and her best friends are not religious. Aria too found herself in friend groups with less religious individuals. She said that she surrounds herself with other atheists as friends in order to avoid constant conflict: “I choose to surround myself with people—because I can’t get into debates all the time about stuff. I can’t debate about feminism. I can’t debate about atheism. It would be so draining. So, my friends are all people who feel similarly, I’d say. None of them go to church.”

            Many participants coped with anticipated stigma by tightly controlling information about their identities to acquaintances to avoid judgment and discrimination. Cora mentioned that as far as romantic interests are concerned, she would avoid telling a person early in the relationship that she is an atheist. She also took any information off of Facebook concerning her atheist identity saying:

            I did before have like ‘Pastafarian’ and ‘Liberal Socialist,’ and now I’m making it more       of a professional….I don’t have those on there because I don’t want…that to be the first         thing that people see and already start judging me. And when I’m applying for       things…even in a liberal society, I do think I don’t want somebody to, you know, throw          me out of a pool [of job candidates] or something because I am an atheist…and I’m             fearful that if there is someone who is Evangelical and looks down upon atheists, that if    they just see ‘atheist’ somehow on Facebook, that I’d been thrown out. You know, I            wouldn’t want that, and I think that could happen…I wish it didn’t have to be that way. I’m proud to be a freethinker.

 

            Jennifer said that the people she is very close to know she is an atheist, but she added that her atheist identity is “not something I advertise, just ‘cause while I’m not ashamed of it in any way…it’s not something I advertise. I don’t know if it’s because I’m a private person or what…I don’t know.”

            James commented that he consciously filters himself around certain groups of people, saying, “I guess there’s certain situations where I feel it…would be under attack if I brought it up, and that’s why I’d be nervous to bring it up in certain situations like around certain…I guess family members or other people…that I knew to be religious.” James, like many of his other atheist peers interviewed, said that his closest friends are also atheists.

            Dillon cited a specific experience where he had to control information for fear of being seen differently by his friends (he has a diverse friend group in terms of religious beliefs.):

            I have a friend group [that] is religious, and I’ve been told by other people not to bring it   up or talk about my identity…because ‘they’ll think about you differently and might treat             you… or hold grudges’ or something like that. So I’ve held my tongue for a few people.    But it hasn’t come up naturally. I haven’t held my tongue.

 

For Dillon, it seemed that while the threat of fallout from the discovery of his atheist identity by some of his friends finding out about his atheism has caused him to be cautious of what he says, but at the same time, it is possible that religion is not an important enough topic for him to feel truly fearful of being cast out from his friend group.

Coping with Stigma: Redefining Morality

            Another method of coping with stigma associated with an atheist identity was defining or redefining morality outside of religion. A final important aspect to all interviews was the question of morality. All participants were very firm on the fact that they were moral humans, and they were moral without God. Many described a nuanced view of morality as something that had to be constantly negotiated and not black-and-white. Some participants also saw morality as being very different from a religious person’s morality, while others saw it as being similar due to a shared social construction of morality by society as a whole.

Actively Rejecting a Divine Morality

            Brian actively rejected any idea of a morality based in religion, and specifically Christianity. He said:

            I think the Bible is an awful source of morality. There’s things advocated in that book       that are cringe-worthy. I mean, stoning to death for minor offenses [like] picking up logs            on a Sunday…There’s awful morality in the Bible. And it’s a very slippery slope when    you have dogmatically imposed morality. Basically you have to believe the tenets of this   book.

 

Brian articulated his own ideas of morality, explaining the nuances of moral relativism, non-religious objective morality, and other theories, ultimately saying that he is still negotiating his own ideas of where morality originates for humans. He made an interesting point, saying:

            I think morality is basically just a subset of human behavior and how we interact with       other people, and I think that because it’s been given this name and this special status, we’ve sort of lost sight of the fact that it is just, you know, the way humans interact with            one another and there’s nothing special or other-worldly about that. It’s just human             behavior. It falls into the same category as dietary habits, which no one would say there’s             a god-given diet. 

 

Brian, interestingly, also rejected a morality deriving from atheism saying: “My moral system is not atheism and my intellectual system is not atheism. It’s [just] a consequence or conclusion that I’ve reached.”

            Similarly, Jennifer thought that morality derived outside of religion is different from morality based on religious texts or tenets, saying:

            I think in some ways, atheists have a very different morality. Or they come by their          morality from a very different standpoint from religious people. I think sometimes      religious people get stuck on this crutch of like, ‘well I did something bad, but if I go         pray about it later, it’s ok.’ Coming from an atheist perspective, I believe you get one     shot. Like there is no afterlife where you can have more time to live or you can make         better choices. And I think your morality comes from wanting to be a good person and    wanting to be nice to the people around you rather than trying to please some higher     being or get to some higher place when you die.

 

            Bethany also perceived morals as being possible without religion, and even implied that religion and morals should actually be separate, saying:

            Your morals should not be defined by your [religious] beliefs. I think those are two           separate things. And that your morals are, you know, if you’re an honest person, if you         help others, if you are loyal and trustworthy, and everything like that. And that it can go along with your religion, but it does not have to.

 

Through this statement, Bethany posits herself as a moral human and also acknowledges that religion and morality can absolutely be compatible, but that they do not require each other.

Society as a Source of Morality

            Several participants defined morality as coming from socialization and societal norms, and therefore concluded that morality exists as a socially constructed fact existing independently of religion. Aria emphasized this point saying: “Religious morals are socially constructed as well as the morals that guide the rest of society, so we can all easily agree that like, you know, harming someone is wrong.” In this way, Aria argued that because morals and norms are socially constructed regardless of whether they are constructed within a religion or not, all people in a society share these basic morals. James had a similar response, saying that morality is “based on both human nature and society’s norms” and thus, “people in general are going to share a lot of what they see to be moral just based on what they grow up with regardless of what their religion is, necessarily.” James continued that he believed in a biological reason for morality, saying:

            I think certain things like not killing people- that’s hardwired into your genes is to feel      that way and to be repulsed by certain things. And I think that’s kind of where a lot of   religious people go wrong is they see that morals are derived from some book…but I see   that as more of a human trait than anything.

 

Mark also thought of morality as an ingrained human trait saying:

            There is morality. There’s something our consciousness inside of us knows what   decision [to make]. It knows the consequences. We’re very smart people. All of us…we            have an ability to know. Do I think that there is an intrinsic…right and wrong in the          universe? No. I don’t. I don’t think that there’s a black and white…

 

            Through articulating their own senses of morality and sources of morality, the participants coped with stigma attached to their identity as atheists and the stereotype that atheists do not have a sense of morality. Through negotiating personal theories of morality derived outside of religion, participants were able to conceptualize themselves as moral beings in order to contradict negative attitudes toward them held by family members, friends, and society. Some atheists even implied that morals that came from religious texts and beliefs were actually morally flawed and that it benefited individuals to look outside religion in order to be truly moral. In these ways, atheists were able to posit themselves as altruistic, moral beings while asserting their identity as atheists.

 

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER 5: DISCUSSION

 

            Atheists have historically been an invisible “religious” minority not only in society but in the field of sociology and within the subfield of the sociology of religion. However, the body of literature that documents the lived experiences of atheists and the different pathways to an atheist identity has expanded in recent years, including empirical studies on college atheists (see Bowman and Small 2010; Siner 2007; Nash 2010), the identity formation of atheists involved in atheist organizations (see Smith 2010; LeDrew 2013), and the collective identity work and stigma coping mechanisms atheists employ (Smith 2013). As existing studies have had a tendency to focus on group identities or to be comparative (comparing atheist identity formation to religious identity formation), this thesis research fills a gap in the extant research by placing the individual college atheist as the focal point in his or her own right. Due to their more private nature outside of a group context, individual processes of atheist identity formation and experiences with an atheist identity are rarely captured and are thus my main contribution to the extant literature. My findings both corroborate and contradict some of the existing literature in this field, indicating the need for further research on college atheists. In this chapter, I discuss the most prominent findings of my study and how they relate to or can be added to the existing literature.

Study Limitations

            Although this research fills a gap in the missing literature on atheist identities by focusing specifically on a college population, there are several limitations of this study that should be considered. First, the setting in which the study was conducted seemed to be a supportive context in which most students felt comfortable with their atheist identities. As mentioned previously, the city in which the study took place is highly affluent, liberal, and educated. It also has a very low rate of religiosity. These contextual factors likely have a reciprocal relationship with the types of people who choose to study at the University of Colorado. A liberal university is likely to attract liberal students who in turn, influence the culture of the city. College students in Boulder also tend to be more privileged in terms of life chances and affluence, which could also bias results. Further, many of my participants cited feeling a high rate of acceptance in Boulder, but stated that they may feel otherwise if they lived in a different city, in the South for example. Further, the methods are limited by the fact that interviews have their own specific way of explaining the social world through a person’s perspective at one point in time. Responses to questions may vary based on the audience of the informant, the informant’s state of mind, and other external factors. A final limitation to this study is that respondents who were raised in a religious household were all raised in Christian households. Experiences with adopting an atheist identity after rejecting a religion other than Christianity may be an area that could be studied further. Future research should include Jewish, Muslim, and other religiously influenced college students.  

Despite these limitations, my study provides an unprecedented exploration of the process by which college students identify as atheists and their experiences with atheism. The findings contribute to the extant research on atheism and on college students.

I. Backgrounds

            As suggested by Hunsberger (2000), although many of the atheists that I interviewed came from religious homes, there was a high incidence of at least one parent showing a level of relative disinterest in the emphasis of religion in the lives of respondents. This tended to be the father figure who might acquiesce to the mother’s desire to attend church. Many of these “acquiescing” parental figures would eventually stop making the child go to church if resistance was perceived, or as seen in Edward’s, Dillon’s, and Matthew’s cases, family church attendance was simply discontinued. This reflects the findings of LeDrew who both suggests that children growing up in less religious homes may receive more of a secular socialization, and that some participants go through a “discovery” process of their atheist identity rather than a deconversion from a high level of religious belief (2013:8).

            This is not to suggest that even in more secular homes, respondents were not expected to believe in something, rather, the desire of parents for their children to choose to believe was very high. Some parents allowed their child to explore other religions and find their own way, but this freedom was allowed with the expectation that respondents would settle on a religious belief. Indeed, many participants felt this pressure believe in something, with most defaulting to Christianity (some in belief and practice, and some only in practice) because it was common in their communities and peer groups, because they celebrated Christmas, and so on. This suggests the extent to which Christianity saturates the culture of the United States. Adopting Christianity “by default” even among participants raised in relatively secular homes is consistent with the findings of Smith (2010:7). In terms of religious practice, levels were fairly high among my participants when they were children. This was due to the influence of parents (and often, grandparents) who required church attendance for practical reasons or as being a member of the family as well as the presence of friends and a social life centered in the church community.

II. Pathways to Atheism

            A very important part of adopting an atheist identity was a questioning period as reported by many of my participants raised in a Christian household or who reported having some level of belief in God.[13] In contrast to previous findings that many atheists went through this phase upon entering college (Smith 2010; LeDrew 2013), almost all of my participants experienced this questioning phase sometime before college, most commonly in middle school and high school. All but three participants (Bethany, James, and Brian) declared themselves atheist before entering college. This is an important finding that contradicts the stereotype of college as an institutional moment for identity change, leading one to believe that as Regnerus and Uecker pointed out, many atheists are already on the track to adopting this identity before attending a university (2007:3). However, it is clear that in some cases, college does play a role in crystallizing an atheist identity. This could be through classes where students are encouraged to question their beliefs (such as the philosophy class that Bethany took her freshman year) or perhaps through participants being in a supportive normative context away from their homes where their atheist identity may not have been as accepted by their families. Many respondents cited Boulder and the academic community at the University of Colorado as being generally accepting places for atheists. Coming into contact with other atheists as roommates and as classmates may play a role in allowing a “dormant” atheist identity to emerge and become formally adopted while in college even if the person was already questioning their beliefs and had beliefs that were in line with atheism (such as James).

           The background effects of participants and the role of college as a force that crystallizes atheist identities rather than an institution that creates them, indicates that more research needs to be done on atheist identities throughout the life-course. As suggested by Schweitzer (2004), people may cycle back to religious practice after exiting the period in their lives associated with exploration and experimentation. However, Schweitzer’s findings seem to pertain more to religious practice that may be temporarily abandoned during adolescence and college years, while my results suggest an abandonment in religious beliefs. In order to gain a better understanding of atheism throughout the life-course, more longitudinal studies of atheists who reject religious belief and not just practice would add to the conversation being developed by scholars studying atheist identity formation in adolescents and youth (such as Schweitzer 2004; Regnerus and Uecker 2007; Hunsberger 2000).

III. Experiences with an Atheist Identity

            As expected, most atheists interviewed had a conception of their own atheism as being defined as a lack of a belief in a higher power. However, there were some interesting themes that emerged where participants often added ideas to their definitions of atheism like stereotypes of atheists as knowledgeable about other religions, open-minded, and critical thinkers. This was an interesting theme that presented itself that raised the idea of atheists having stereotypes of other atheists. It is interesting to note that all of the stereotypes described were positive. This may be in response to commonly negative stereotyping of atheists by some religious people, and may in itself be a coping mechanism on the part of atheists. It may be a way to connect with people who share their “dis-belief” and thereby creates an “us” versus “them” situation where all atheists are seen as fellow stigma-bearers, as Goffman might say (1968). The experiences of stigma will be discussed in more detail later.

            Another important finding was related to identity salience. Through my interviews, it seemed as if respondents distinguished between atheism as being part of their identity versus being a belief that had little bearing on their identity. Although a person’s self comprises multiple identities (Mead 1934), some respondents hesitated to say that atheism was very important to their identity. One of these respondents (Brian) said this was a matter of semantics. Although he said he would never deny being an atheist, he felt that in terms of an identity, skepticism was more central for him personally. For Brian, this term better informed his orientation toward the world, which was predominantly skeptical, questioning, and cerebral. To Brian, atheism was not a term he preferred, but this is not to say that skepticism (and many other beliefs that are typical of atheists) were not important to his identity. In contrast to Brian, other respondents who rated atheism as less important did so because it was just a topic that did not arise in daily life. These tended to be atheists who claimed atheist belief due to a “default” status as a result of being raised in a secular household and never being able to make themselves believe, rather than actively adopting an atheist identity. One participant (Aria) saw atheism as being more similar to political beliefs rather than a part of her “core identity” while another (Karen) also said that making a lack of a belief an important part of her identity seemed “counterintuitive.” It is worth noting that several participants continued to be “on the fence” about their beliefs, with two preferring the term “agnostic atheist” instead of “atheist.” If they were not fully ready to adopt this identity, it makes logical sense that this identity would not be extremely salient.

            Of the participants who viewed atheism as very salient to their identities, many cited reasons for this being a scientific worldview. Some did not want to reconcile religion and science. Others felt that being an atheist and seeing the world in a more scientific light based on science and reason was simply more rational in their minds.

IV. Perceptions of Stigma

            One of the larger implications of my findings is that atheists continue to feel some level of stigma based on their identities as atheists. My participants reported being told that they were immoral by religious people and feeling that they might be discriminated against in the job market if they were open about their identity. Although my findings indicate that atheists continue to feel unaccepted at some level, many participants said that they felt relatively accepted on the CU Boulder campus, perhaps contradicting the findings of previous scholars studying religious social climate on college campuses (see Bowman and Small 2010; Nash 2010). Despite citing the university campus as a supportive normative context, many atheists still acknowledged their identity as stigmatized and still felt unaccepted on a societal level. Interestingly, many atheists did not cite many examples of discrimination on an institutional or societal level, but there remained a fear of this type of discrimination and the recognition by many that their identity was still not widely accepted. Matthew and other participants used the concept of “preference” to articulate that although society may be becoming more accepting, it would still “prefer” that individuals were not atheists.

            These findings can be seen as part of a greater conversation about stigmatized identities on and off college campuses. Navigating the world with an embattled identity is not particular to atheists and is very prevalent among members of other minority groups, especially sexual minorities. Concepts of stigma, identity formation, and coping mechanisms have been applied frequently to the LGBT community who are often labeled as sexual deviants by U.S. society and who suffer similar marginalization, discrimination, and lack of access to the same rights that members of the heterosexual majority of U.S. society enjoy (See Kaufman and Johnson 2004; Bernstein 2002; Fassinger 1996). The LGBT community has been compared to the atheist community by several sociologists of religion as well, some even borrowing models of LGBT identity development (Fassinger 1996) and applying it to atheist identity development (Siner 2007; Smith 2010). On college campuses specifically, the experiences of atheists could also be related to other stigmatized religious minorities such as Muslim students. Muslim women on college campuses in particular are more visible if they choose to wear a hijab, and therefore navigate certain social stigmas on U.S. college campuses (See Mir 2009; Cole and Ahmadi 2003).

V. Individual Coping Mechanisms

            Whether or not they felt accepted by society or individuals, many participants reported some sort of stigma coping mechanism whether it was surrounding themselves with other like-minded individuals, controlling the amount of information they shared with certain groups of people, and/or negotiating their own sense of morality. The previous research done on managing atheism as a stigmatized identity has focused on other stigmatized groups excluding atheists (Goffman 1968) or on the collective in terms of how atheists seek out groups of people with whom to connect and create community (Smith 2010). To the extent of my knowledge and research, little has been done on how atheists as individuals cope with stigma if they do not necessarily join atheist charities, activist groups, and so on. From my interviews, it was made clear that many respondents did have a way of managing their identities. Friend groups of respondents commonly comprised of mostly other atheists, people who were not very religious, or at the very least, liberally-minded individuals. Respondents explained not wanting to argue about core beliefs all the time and freely admitted to having like-minded people as their closest friends. This serves as evidence for Goffman’s theories of stigma that suggest that people create in-groups with “fellow-sufferers” of the stigma (1968:112). Many respondents cited great enjoyment out of being able to freely discuss any topic they wanted or to share information without feeling socially hindered or judged as a part of these in-groups.

            Only sharing information about one’s atheist identity to a select group of people in one’s life corroborated Goffman’s idea of controlling information as a stigma-coping mechanism (1968:95). This strategy was exemplified by participants in this study who avoided openly “advertising” their atheism, especially on social media sites where they feared discrimination from potential employers. Several respondents specifically said that they removed or avoided posting information on Facebook that stated their affiliation with atheist beliefs. Many also added that they do not talk about their atheism in groups of people who are not close friend or family members unless someone else brings it up first. None of the respondents said that they would deny their identities, but most simply chose to keep that particular topic off the table to avoid potential conflict. Thus, acquaintances, employers, and friends outside the participants’ inner circles make up the large group to which respondents do not share intimate information that could “other” them in a social situation. The small group with which the respondents chose to openly share their atheism and believes included close friends, family, and intimate partners.

            Morality was another key point that respondents continuously negotiated in coping with their identities as atheists. Since morality is the main point of contention between many religious and atheist people, with much of the stigma surrounding atheists arising from the common belief that atheists are rejecting common foundations of being a “good” person (and, in the United States, being a good “American”), the idea for my respondents that they were moral beings was crucial. Every single respondent had their own thoughts about morality whether or not they believed that religious people and atheists share the exact same morals. Many thought that regardless of whether or not one is religious, morals come from socially constructed norms in society as well as biological drives to keep the human species alive. Declaring oneself a moral being was important for respondents, many of whom actively rejected, and even showed disdain for morality derived from religion.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER 6: CONCLUSION

 

            This study contributes to the understanding of college atheists and their adoption of an identity that remains stigmatized and embattled in the context of a society where being religious continues to be the norm. The participants in my study showed how important background factors are in the adoption of an atheist identity. I found that the role college played in relation to an atheist identity was to crystallize an identity-achieving process already set in motion in an individual’s childhood or adolescence. The specific campus of CU Boulder played a role as a supportive normative context where some atheists were able to finally adopt this identity and where most atheists felt comfortable being relatively open about their atheist identity. For some, atheism was not considered an identity, but rather a set of beliefs that were low in salience. However, most participants perceived atheism as a very important part of their identity. Regardless of identity salience, many atheists that I interviewed continued to perceive a social stigma, and whether or not direct discrimination based on this identity, it was still feared. It is unfortunate that some atheists feel that they have to censor themselves at any level for fear of experiencing discrimination or proselytizing. Although many religious people may mean well when they make comments about praying for an atheist or wanting them to come to church, for many atheists, this is offensive. It negates an atheist identity as legitimate and assumes that atheist people have an identity that is “less than” a Christian or other religious identity. It also assumes that atheists are not moral beings, when the findings of my study show the exact opposite. Atheists can be just as moral as religious individuals. In fact, many of the atheists in my study stated that they greatly enjoy contemplating morality and its implications. Thus, it is time for U.S. society to dispel these negative stereotypes of atheists as rejecting morality and to see atheists as just as moral and just as “American” as any other religious individual. This need extends to families of atheists, political parties, employers, and universities. Atheists should be able to live in a society alongside Christians and other religious groups without feeling uncomfortable or stigmatized. It is time to hear the atheist point of view without clouding the social climate with fear, stereotypes, and judgments.

 

                       

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

REFERENCES

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Bainbridge, William S. 2009. "Atheism." Pp. 319-335 in The Oxford Handbook of the Sociology   of Religion, edited by P.M. Clarke. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Beit-Hallahmi, Benjamin. 2011. “Atheists: A Psychological Profile.” Pp. 300-313 in The   Cambridge Companion to Atheism, edited by M. Martin. New York: Cambridge         University Press.

Bernstein, Mary. 2002. “Identities and Politics: Toward a Historical Understanding of the            Lesbian and Gay Movement.” Social Science History 26(3): 531-581.

Bowman, Nicholas A. and Jenny L. Small. 2010. “Do College Students Who Identify with a         Privileged Religion Experience Greater Spiritual Development? Exploring Individual and         Institutional Dynamics.” Research in Higher Education 51(7): 595-614.

            doi:10.1007/s11162-010-9175-2.

Bulger, Matthew. 2013. “Unelectable Atheists: U.S. States that Prohibit Godless Americans from            Holding Public Office.” American Humanist Association. Retrieved Feb. 8, 2015

            (http://americanhumanist.org/HNN/details/2012-05-unelectable-atheists-us-...     prohibit-godless#comment-1108615841). 

Campbell, Colin. 1972. Toward a Sociology of Irreligion. New York: Herder and Herder.

Caplovitz, David and Fred Sherrow. 1977. The Religious Drop-Outs: Apostasy Among College     Graduates. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage.

Carriere-Kretschmer, Erin and Kathleen Holzwart. 2008. “Chapter 2. Religiosity.” Pp. 18-24 in   “Unfavorable Views of Jews and Muslims on the Increase in Europe.” The Pew Global   Attitudes Project. Pew Research Center. Washington D.C. Retrieved Oct. 30, 2014             (http://www.pewglobal.org/2008/09/17/chapter-2-religiosity/).

Cline, Austin. 2015. “Definition of Irreligion, Irreligious.” About Religion. Retrieved Feb. 9,

            2015 (http://atheism.about.com/od/Atheist-Dictionary/g/Irreligion-Irreligious-        Definition.htm).

Cole, Darnell and Shafiqa Ahmadi. 2003. “Perspectives and Experiences of Muslim Women          Who Veil on College Campuses.” Journal of College Student Development 44(1): 47-66.

Cooperman, Alan, Greg Smith, Besheer Mohamed, Jessica Martinez, Elizabeth Sciupac,   Katherine Ritchey. 2014. “How Americans Feel About Religious Groups.” Religion and            Public Life Project. Pew Research Center. Washington D.C.: Pew Research Center.            Retrieved Oct. 28, 2014 (http://www.pewforum.org/2014/07/16/how-americans-feel-            about-religious-groups/). 

Dawkins, Richard. 2013. "The Out Campaign." Retrieved Nov. 5 2013. (http://outcampaign.org).

Edgell, Penny, Joseph Gerteis, and Douglas Hartmann. 2006. “Atheists As "Other": Moral          Boundaries and Cultural Membership in American Society.” American Sociological

            Review 71(2): 211-234.

Fassinger, Ruth E. 1998. “Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Identity and Student Development Theory.” Pp 13-22 in Working with Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender College Students, edited by R.L. Sanlo. Westpor, CT: Greenwood Press.

Florida, Richard. 2013. “America’s Most (and Least) Religious Metro Areas.” The Atlantic.

            Retrieved Jan. 3, 2015 (http://www.citylab.com/housing/2013/04/americas-most-and-

            least-religious-metro-areas/5180/).

Frank, Adam. 2014 “Does Being ‘Spiritual But Not Religious’ Really Mean Anything?”   National Public Radio. Oct. 21. Retrieved Feb. 23, 2015             (http://www.npr.org/blogs/13.7/2014/10/21/357770909/does-being-spiritual-...        religious-really-mean-anything).

Gervais, Will M., and Ara Norenzayan. 2012. "Reminders of Secular Authority Reduce    Believers' Distrust of Atheists." Psychological Science 23 (5): 583-91. Retrieved Oct.           17, 2013. doi: 10.1177/0956797611429711.

Goffman, Erving. 1968. Stigma: Notes on the Management of Spoiled Identity. New York, NY:      Simon & Schuster, Inc.

Greenberg, Neil. 2008. Can Spirituality be Defined? University of Tennessee. University Studies Interdisciplinary Colloquy on Spirituality and Critical Inquiry. Retrieved Feb. 23, 2015        (http://notes.utk.edu/bio/unistudy.nsf/935c0d855156f9e08525738a006f2417/b... 58d14a852573b00072525d).

Hamblin, James. 2013. “Bullied for Not Believing in God.” The Atlantic. Sept. 13. Retrieved on    March 13, 2015 (http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2013/09/bullied-for-not-            believing-in-god/279095/).

Hill, Chris and Peter Sprigg. 2013. “Slippery slope to accepting atheist Boy Scouts.” USA            Today. May 25. Retrieved March 13, 2015 (http://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2013        /05/25/boy-scouts-gay-god-column/2357959/).

Hunsberger, Bruce. 2000. “Swimming against the current: exceptional cases of apostates and         converts.” Pp. 233-247 in Joining and Leaving Religion: Research Perspectives, edited             by L.J. Francis and Y.J. Katz. Herefordshire, England: Redwood Books.

Kaufman, Joanne M. and Cathryn Johnson. 2004. “Stigmatized Individuals and the Process of     Identity.” The Sociological Quarterly 45(4): 807-833.

LeDrew, Stephen. 2013. “Discovering Atheism: Heterogeneity in Trajectories to Atheist Identity and Activism.” Sociology of Religion: 1-23.

Lipka, Michael. 2013. “5 facts about atheists.” Pew Research Center. Retrieved Nov. 13, 2014    (http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2013/10/23/5-facts-about-atheists/).

Mead, George Herbert. 1934. Mind, Self, and Society: From the Standpoint of a Social       Behaviorist. Edited by C.W. Morris. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.

Mir, Shabana. 2009. “ ‘Not Too College-Like,’ Not Too Normal: American Muslim          Undergraduate Women’s Gendered Discourses.” Anthropology and Education Quarterly        40(3): 237-256.

Moreno, Carlos S. 2014. “An atheist for Congress?” CNN. Sept. 1. Retrieved Feb. 8, 2014

            (http://www.cnn.com/2014/08/31/opinion/moreno-atheists-unelectable-congress/).

Morris, R.C. 2013. “Identity Salience and Identity Importance in Identity Theory.” Current        Research in Social Psychology: 23-36. Retrieved Nov. 7, 2014    (http://www.uiowa.edu/~grpproc/crisp/crisp21_8.pdf).

Nash, Robert J. 2010. “Inviting Atheists to the Table: A Modest Proposal for Higher Education.”            Religion and Education 30(1): 1-23. doi:10.1080/15507394.2003.10012315.

Regnerus, Mark E. and Jeremy E. Uecker. 2007. "How Corrosive is College to Religious   Faith    and Practice?” Social Science Research Council: 1–6.

Sahgal, Neha. 2009. “The Religious Affiliations of U.S. Presidents.” Pew Research Center:           Religion and Public Life. Jan 15. Retrieved March 5, 2015.             (http://www.pewforum.org/2009/01/15/the-religious-affiliations-of-us-pres...).

Schweitzer, Friedrich L. 2004. The Postmodern Life Cycle: Challenges for Church and      Theology. Danvers, MA: Chalice Press.

Seifert, Tricia. 2007. “Understanding Christian Privilege: Managing the Tensions of Spiritual        Plurality.” About Campus. 10-17.

Siner, Sam. "A Theory of Atheist Student Identity Development."  2007.  Journal of the   Indiana University Student Personnel Association: 14-21.

Smith, Jesse M. 2010. "Becoming an Atheist in America: Constructing Identity and Meaning        From a Rejection of Theism." Sociology of Religion. 72(2): 1-23.

Smith, Jesse M. 2013. “Creating a Godless Community: The Collective Identity Work of             Contemporary American Atheists.” Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. (52): 80-  99.

University of Colorado Boulder. 2015. “Religious Campus Organizations.” Retrieved March 11, 2015 (http://www.colorado.edu/studentgroups/rco/people).

“University of Colorado-Boulder. 2015. U.S. News and World Report. Retrieved March 19, 2015

            (http://colleges.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/best-colleges/cu-boulder-1370).

U.S. Constitution, Article 6, Section 3.

 

 

           

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

APPENDIX A: Recruitment Material

Email Advertisement text (Body of the text will also be used for class presentations)

 

Subject: Opportunity to be involved in a research study

 

Body: University of Colorado senior is performing a study regarding atheist identity formation. If you identify as an atheist and are a CU student between the ages of 18-24, please contact to learn more about the study and consider if you would be interested in being interviewed. Interviews will likely last between a half hour to an hour and will cover your personal experiences and views regarding atheism and religion. Participants will be compensated with a $10 gift card.

 

Contact information: email: atheist.study@gmail.com

Phone: 970-333-4618

 

Flyer 1

1. Are you a Godless Heathen?

2. Do you want to be part of a research study?

3.  Are you a CU student between the ages of 18 and 24?

4. Could you use $10?

 

If you answered “yes” to the above questions, I want to talk to you! I’m a CU senior conducting a sociological study involving 30-minute one-on-one interviews regarding Atheist identity formation for my honors research project. If you are interested in learning more about my study and possibly participating, please call 970-333-4618 or email atheist.study@gmail.com.

 

Participants will be compensated with a $10 gift card  

 

 

 

Flyer 2

Don’t Believe in God?

Get paid to share your personal experiences as an Atheist.

A senior at CU is conducting a sociological study involving 1/2 -1 hour one-on-one interviews regarding Atheist identity formation. If you are a CU student between the ages of 18 and 24 and identify as an Atheist, please call 970-333-4618 or email atheist.study@gmail.com to learn more about the study and see if you’d like to participate.

Participants will be compensated with a $10 gift card to your choice of Starbucks or Amazon.com.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

APPENDIX B: Consent Form (HRP-502)

Title of research study: The Atheist Experience: A Sociological Approach to College Students’ Identity and Identity Salience

Investigator:

Why am I being invited to take part in a research study?

I invite you to take part in a research study because I would like to understand how college students who identify as atheist come to adopt this identity and how they experience it, for example, do they feel there is stigma associated with being an atheist? There is little research conducted on this particular topic as pertaining to college students and as a result, they will be the focus of my study.

What should I know about a research study?

  • I will explain this research study to you.
  • Whether or not you take part is up to you.
  • You can choose not to take part.
  • You can agree to take part and later change your mind.
  • Your decision will not be held against you.
  • You can ask all the questions you want before you decide.
  • You can skip any of the questions or decide to quit your participation at any time.

Who can I talk to?

If you have questions, concerns, or complaints, or think the research has hurt you, talk to the research team at 970-333-4618. If you would rather speak to someone other than the primary researcher, you can contact Dr. Joanne Belknap at joanne.belknap@colorado.edu.

This research has been reviewed and approved by an Institutional Review Board (“IRB”). You may talk to them at (303) 735-3702 or irbadmin@colorado.edu if:

  • Your questions, concerns, or complaints are not being answered by the research team.
  • You cannot reach the research team.
  • You want to talk to someone besides the research team.
  • You have questions about your rights as a research subject.
  • You want to get information or provide input about this research.

Why is this research being done?

This research is being done to better understand why college students identify as atheist and to identify the pathways there are to adopting or maintaining this identity. This research, ideally, will better explain concepts of identity and especially stigmatized identity as many groups and individuals in the United States view atheists as immoral and “un-American.” The goal of this study is to advance the understanding of an atheist identity formation, identity salience, and whether stigmatizing is something atheists experience and if so, how.

How long will the research last?

I expect that the interview will take approximately one-half to one hour, but it may be longer if you want to answer the questions in more depth.

How many people will be studied?

I hope to interview between 10 and 30 people in this study.

What happens if I say yes, I want to be in this research?

You will be interviewed by a senior studying Sociology at CU Boulder. The interview will last from a half-hour to one hour, depending on the depth of your responses and will be scheduled taking into account both your and my schedules. A series of questions will be asked about your experiences of being or becoming an atheist. Questions will include background information about religious experiences, deconversion experiences, and reasons for becoming (or remaining) an atheist. If you give your consent, a recording device may be used to make data collection more accurate. If you would like to participate but not have your interview recorded, I will not record it. The interview will be performed wherever you feel the most comfortable (within reason) with recommended sites being library study rooms or a coffee shop. All personal information that participants provide will be kept confidential. Names and other identifying information will be changed. The study findings will not be written in a manner that could identify any of the participants.

What happens if I do not want to be in this research?

You can leave the research at any time with no repercussions. If you decide to leave before the interview is complete (with the exception of skipping a few questions), no compensation will be given.

What happens if I say yes, but I change my mind later?

You can leave the research at any time and it will not be held against you.

Is there any way being in this study could be bad for me?

If it is difficult for you to talk about your atheist identity, your pathway to atheism, and/or response to your atheist identity by family, friends, and so on, it is possible that you will feel uncomfortable during the interview. For example, you will be asked about reasons for leaving a previous religion (if applicable) and whether as an atheist you have experienced any discrimination.

Will being in this study help me any way?

Other than the $10 gift card, I cannot promise any benefits to you or others from your taking part in this research. However, possible benefits include being able to talk openly about a commonly stigmatized identity and understanding your own identity. Ideally, I will publish my findings in order to broaden the knowledge base and improve the understanding of atheists, particularly college student atheists.

What happens to the information collected for the research?

I will make every effort to ensure that your participation is confidential and anonymous. You can tell people you participated, but I will not. The only individuals that could possibly have access to the data are members of the University of Colorado-Boulder Institutional Review Board.

Information collected will be used to discover trends and better explain atheism as a sociological phenomenon. Your information will be used to write a formal research paper that will be presented as an honors thesis to a committee of faculty. During the study, your information will be kept in a secure location. Your real name will be replaced with a number and later (for publishing purposes or for the final research paper) you will be given a fictitious name. Any recordings and other documents with personal information will be destroyed after the data have been collected.

What else do I need to know?

If you agree to take part in this study, you will be compensated with a $10 gift card for your time and effort. No amount will be paid if the interview is abandoned without being completed (unless only a few questions are skipped).

Signature Block for Capable Adult

Your signature documents your permission to take part in this research.

 

 

 

Signature of subject

 

Date

 

 

Printed name of subject

 

 

 

Signature of person obtaining consent

 

Date

 

 

 

Printed name of person obtaining consent

 

IRB Approval Date

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Permission to be Audio-Recorded

 

**not required**

 

 

Your signature documents your permission to be audio-recorded as part of this research.

 

 

 

Signature of subject

 

Date

 

 

Printed name of subject

 

 

 

Signature of person obtaining consent

 

Date

 

 

 

Printed name of person obtaining consent

 

IRB Approval Date

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

APPENDIX C: Interview Schedule (HRP-503: Protocol)

The Atheist Experience:

A Sociological Approach to College Students’ Identity and Identity Salience

 

Interview Schedule

 

Section I: Demographics

 

1. Participant Name:

Recruitment Method:

 

2. Age:

 

3. Year in School:

 

4. Field of Study/Major:

 

Section II: Background Information

 

5. Tell me a little bit about your background (family, siblings, etc.) Where did you grow up? (neighborhood, type of house, etc.)

 

6.  What was it that your parents/guardians do/did for a living? (Note if parents are still together or divorced)

 

7. Did you grow up religious? If yes, what religion? If no, see below (#8. A-E)

 

8. What was your religious practice frequency; how often did you attend religious functions, worship, and so on?

 

9.  On a scale of 1 to 10 with 1 being not at all religious and 10 being extremely religious, what number would be the highest you would say describing you over your lifetime when you were the most religious?  Tell me more about this—how old were you, what do you think made you the most religious then?

 

10. Growing up, what was your general attitude towards your religion? (positive, negative, indifferent) What were your experiences as a member of your church, synagogue, etc.?

 

11. If you adhered to your family’s religion/religious practices, why would you say that you did so?

 

12. What was your attitude towards people of other religions when you were growing up?

 

13. What was your attitude towards atheists when you were growing up?

 

 

Section III: Experiences with Atheism

 

14. What does it mean to you to be an atheist? (Prompt: Can you give your definition?)

 

15. What were your first experiences with atheism? How old were you?

 

16. Why would you say that you identify as an atheist now?

 

17. What has been your general attitude towards atheists/atheism now that you identify as an atheist?

 

18. Do you feel like as an atheist your identity is under attack?

 

19. Does your family know you’re an atheist?  If not, why? If so, how did/does your family react to your atheism?

 

20. Do most of your friends, co-workers, and other people in your life know you’re an atheist? If not, why?  If so, how do they react (to your atheism)?

 

21. Do you feel accepted by society as an atheist? If yes, in what ways, and if not, in what ways don’t you feel accepted?

 

22. What are your views about other religions or religious people?

 

23. On a scale of 1 to 10, with 1 being not at all important and 10 being extremely important, how important is your atheism to you?  Can you explain why?

 

24. Does your atheism affect your personal relationships? If so, how?

 

25. Does your atheism affect the way you see the world? If so, how?

 

26. What about morality? What is your view of morality from an atheistic standpoint?

 

27. Are you a part of any atheist groups/organizations?

 

Part IV: Closing

 

28. Thank you for taking part in my interview.  Are there any questions you wish I’d asked? Do you have any more to add that wasn’t captured in the questions I asked? 

 

 

29. Finally, little research has been conducted on atheists.  Can you tell me why you agreed to participate in this research study?

 

 

30. Do you have any friends who you think may be interested in this study? If so, would you be willing to give them my contact information?

**If person grew up atheist, refer to questions below:

 

8. A. What was your attitude towards other religions/religious people?

 

B. Did the religion of others affect you in any way? If so, how?

 

C. Did your parents stress their nonbelief/atheism? If so, how?

 

E. Did your atheism ever become a very important part of your life while you were growing up? If so, how?

 

**Return to question #15

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

APPENDIX D: Religious Information of Participants

Name

Age

Major

Most Religious Point (1-10)

Childhood Religious

Denomination

Age of Adopting Atheist Identity

Atheist Identity Salience

Edward

20

Aerospace Engineering and Engineering Physics

3-4 (age 4 or 5)

Lutheran

12th grade

8

Cora

20

Math and E-Bio

___________

_________________

8th grade

8-9

Jennifer

21

E-Bio and Secondary Science Education

3-4 (up to age 13 or 14)

United Church of Christ (Methodist)

High School

10

Dillon

21

Environmental Studies and Geology

___________

Christian

High School

(didn’t provide number) Low Salience

James

21

MCDB and Political Science

___________ (Described normative belief at an early age)

______________

Senior Year of High School-Freshman Year College

7

Karen

18

Linguistics and German

(Described normative belief at an early age)

________________

8th or 9th grade (end off middle school/beginning of high school)

3

Aria

23

Women’s Studies and Anthropology

5 (age 8)

Old Apostolic Lutheran and Quakerism

4th or 5th grade

3

Danielle

18

Environmental Design

“In between” (very young age)

Lutheran

10th grade

7

Mark

18

History

7 (before 7th grade)

Roman Catholic

10th grade

Very Important (No number provided)

Bethany

18

Anthropology

8 (through middle school)

Non-denominational Christian (Conservative)

Freshman Year of College

4

Matthew

18

Biological and Chemical Engineering

________

Christian

Early Middle School

Important (No number provided)

Brian

22

Calculus, Physics, Astronomy

5 (up to sophomore year of college)

(Presbyterian)

Junior Year of College

Atheism:2

Skepticism:10

Julie

19

Computer Sciences

Low belief, but high practice (up to 5th or 6th grade)

Christian

Age 12-13

8-9

Sophie

18

IPHY and Neuroscience

__________

Catholic school, but no religion in home

“always an atheist”

7

 

 

[1] In my own interviews, it was clear that some atheists were still in a “seeking” phase, or they preferred other labels since their own views were nuanced and evolving. Some participants even referred to themselves as “agnostic atheists.”

[2] A note on spirituality: It is a widely held misconception that atheists cannot be spiritual. Spirituality does not necessarily require a belief in a higher being. Therefore, spiritual people can indeed be atheists and vice versa. According to Greenberg (2008), spirituality can be defined as involving “feelings of significance, unity, awe, joy, acceptance, and consolation. Such feelings are intrinsically rewarding and so are sought in their own right, but they also help us in dealing with different situations involving death, loss, and disappointment.” Sam Harris, a famous neuroscientist, philosopher, and author explained: “spirituality begins with a reverence for the ordinary that can lead us to insights and experiences that are anything but ordinary” (Harris as cited by Frank 2014).

[3] Although Goffman never applied his work on stigma to atheism and atheists, it is certainly relevant for this stigmatized group. Smith (2010:15) also uses Goffman’s concept of “spoiled identities” (stigmatized identities) in reference to atheists as a group, but to my knowledge, this thesis along with Smith’s work are the first works to apply Goffman’s concepts to atheism.

[4] It is worth noting that the United States has never seen an atheist president, nor a president with a religious faith that falls outside of Christianity. Over half of the presidents have been either Episcopalian or Presbyterian, with other Protestant groups represented (Sahgal 2009). To date, there have been no Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, or other religious tradition represented in the White House. This is perhaps telling of how deeply ingrained Christianity is in U.S. society.

[5] All students have the Christmas holiday off from school, but the Christian ethos appears in that this holiday is formally recognized in the academic calendar.

[6] Interestingly, the campus culture at the University of Colorado Boulder (the context of this study) supports Nash’s idea. CU Boulder is home to over 30 religious or spiritual clubs and groups available to students. The vast majority of these clubs are Christian (University of Colorado Boulder 2015). There is only one secular student group on the CU Boulder campus. 

[7] “Theophile” is a term used by Nash to refer to a “God-loving” culture that permeates U.S. society in general as well as university campuses (Nash 2010:3).

[8] This is a club for students who are atheists, agnostics, skeptics, and so on. Members of the club meet to converse about recent scientific findings and to provide an accepting place for people who are not religious (though not necessarily atheist).

[9] This student-run organization publishes University of Colorado undergraduate work in all fields including the natural sciences, social sciences, humanities, art, poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction. The names of the student-run clubs are omitted to protect the privacy of participants.

[10] When analyzing interview responses, stigma was operationalized by the perceptions of an atheist identity being under attack and the perceptions of acceptance of this identity by friends, family, and other people in the participants’ lives. The exact questions were: 18. “Do you feel like as an atheist your identity is under attack?”; 19. “Does your family know you’re an atheist? If not, why? If so, how did/does your family react (to your atheism)?”; 20. “Do most of your

friends, co-workers, and other people in your life know you’re an atheist? If not, why?  If so, how do they react (to your atheism)?”; 21. Do you feel accepted by society as an atheist? If yes, in what ways, and if not, in what ways don’t you feel accepted?”

 

[11] See Appendix C for a table with childhood religious information for each participant.

[12] It is worth noting that several of the participants (Cora, Sophie, and Karen) adopted an atheist identity less through a process, but more as a “default” status. Cora, who never had any level of religious belief nor a religious upbringing, actively adopted and reinforced her atheist background and identity, while Sophie and Karen described never being able to make themselves believe. Karen said: “just learning about other religious traditions, none of them really seem super compelling to me. And maybe I’ll find on that seems really legitimate to me, but it’s just like, none of them seem compelling for the questions that I have.” Sophie had a very similar comment saying: “So far, since I haven’t run into any religions that I do believe in, for the most part, I’m an atheist.”

[13]For a complete list of the participants and their childhood religious beliefs, denominations, and so on, see Appendix D.