Publication | Closed Access
Reaching the Limits of Secularization? Turkish‐ and Moroccan‐Dutch Muslims in the Netherlands 1998–2006
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Citations
18
References
2012
Year
EthnicityReligiosityEducationReligious PluralismSecular ContextSocial ChangeReligious PrejudiceReligion StudiesLanguage StudiesReligious GroupSecularismMosque AttendanceTurkish PoliticsNetherlands 1998–2006Muslim MinoritiesMoroccan‐dutch MuslimsCultureSociologyAnthropologyComparative ReligionIslamic Study
This research note focuses on Muslim minorities living in a secular context, the Netherlands. The question is whether mosque attendance among Turkish‐ and Moroccan‐Dutch changed between 1998 and 2006, testing mechanisms of religious decline and religious vitality. Elaborating on previous research of the same Muslim groups, this study examines a longer time span and adds contextual‐level explanations. Whereas previous research reported a linear trend towards secularization over time and over generations, in recent years the trend has become more complex. The revival of religious attendance among the second generation is most striking. Forces of secularization such as educational attainment and generational replacement gradually lose their predictive power. Over time, processes of secularization are therefore not inevitable.
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