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Religious Elites and Public Opinion: The Impact of the Bishops' Peace Pastoral
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2009
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In their 1983 pastoral letter on war and peace, the Catholic bishops attempted to sway American public opinion against the arms race. Polling data suggest that The Challenge of Peace stimulated a sharp but short-lived reaction against military spending among American Catholics. The message was best received by Catholics strongly tied to their church, reversing a historical correlation between religiosity and nationalism. The pastoral must be judged relatively successful in its mission, particularly in light of the many barriers to attitude change. Greater sensitivity to those obstacles could enhance the success of future efforts at persuasive communication by church authorities.
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References
An earlier version of this article was originally presented to the conference on “The Challenge of Peace: The Catholic Church in Public Debate,” Catholic University of America, Washington, D.C., 27–28 October 1989. I am grateful for the comments of Patout Burns, Michael Martinez, and Kim Lanegran, all of whom read it in draft form, and the subsequent reactions of Bill Marty, Raymond Cohen, Allen Hertzke, David Leege, and the editors of this journal. James Davidson generously supplied me with a prepublication copy of chapter 9 from American Catholic Laity in a Changing Church. The data for Tables 2 and 3 were supplied to me by the Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research. Neither the Consortium nor the original source of the data, the National Opinion Research Center, is responsible for the analysis or interpretation presented here.
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