Working group Religion, identity, and preferences Add to calendar 2025-02-04 17:15 2025-02-04 18:30 Europe/Rome Religion, identity, and preferences Hybrid Event Seminar Room 2 and Zoom YYYY-MM-DD Print Share on Facebook Share on X Share on LinkedIn Send by email When 04 February 2025 17:15 - 18:30 CET Where Hybrid Event Seminar Room 2 and Zoom Organised by Department of Political and Social Sciences This session of the Political Behaviour Colloquium features a presentation by LSE Research Fellow, George Melios. This paper provides causal evidence on the impact of religious identification on political preferences, gender norms, societal beliefs, and group behaviour. Exploiting clergy sexual abuse scandals as a source of exogenous variation in Catholicism, we demonstrate that religious de-identification leads to significant shifts in individual attitudes and political alignment. Using data on millions of U.S. college freshmen and county-level voting records, we find that secularization causes more progressive positions on issues like abortion rights and same-sex marriage, but more conservative views on universal healthcare and military spending. The net effect is a substantial leftward shift in overall political orientation. We also document more progressive gender attitudes, particularly regarding women's workforce participation, among those who deidentify as Catholic. Notably, religious de-identification reduces individuals' propensity to engage in other group activities. Additional analyses suggest that as individuals disaffiliate from Catholicism, they increasingly identify with their social class, which polarizes economic preferences between high and low-income groups.The Zoom link will be sent upon registration. Register Scientific Organiser(s): Prof. Elias Dinas (EUI) Contact(s): Siegfried Manschein (EUI) Nini Petriashvili (EUI) Speaker(s): George Melios (London School of Economics and Political Science)