Publication | Closed Access
FORGIVENESS AND FUNDAMENTALISM: RECONSIDERING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CORRECTIONAL ATTITUDES AND RELIGION*
225
Citations
92
References
2000
Year
Forensic PsychologyPenologyReligious PrejudiceReligious AffiliationSociologyCarceral SettingReligiosityLawCorrectional PracticeCriminal LawPrison ViolenceSocial JusticeReligious BeliefsCorrectional AttitudesSocial SciencesCriminal Justice
Although research typically has failed to establish a relationship between religious affiliation and correctional attitudes, recent assessments have revealed that fundamentalist Christians tend to be more punitive than are nonfundamentalists. These studies have advanced our understanding considerably, but their conceptualization of religion and correctional attitudes has been limited. Using a statewide survey, the present study demonstrates that compassionate as well as fundamentalist aspects of religious beliefs are related to public correctional preferences. Further, our results reveal that religion influences support for rehabilitation as well as punitiveness. These findings suggest the need for scholars to think more broadly about the role of religion in criminology.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1