Religion and the Demand for Membership in Environmental Citizen Groups
Robert C Lowry
Public Choice, 1998, vol. 94, issue 3-4, 223-40
Abstract:
The author tests the hypothesis that religious affiliation is an empirical measure of tastes and beliefs that affect the demand for membership in environmental citizen groups. The number of adherents to Judeo-Christian denominations per household has a significant, negative effect on state membership rates for nine groups advocating a preservationist approach to environmental policy, particularly in states with many Catholics, Baptists, and Mormons. Religious affiliation has a marginally significant, positive effect on membership rates for two sportsmen groups advocating private stewardship. These results suggest that religious affiliation should also be a significant determinant of constituent preferences for environmental policies. Copyright 1998 by Kluwer Academic Publishers
Date: 1998
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