Abstract
In an urban community in northern. Florida patterns of social integration among Catholic migrants were analyzed. Seven sets of attitudinal scales were constructed, and the area of value integration was compared with patterns of social participation and degrees of identification with the South. It was found that manifestation of attitudinal inconsistency seemed to have been distinctive of the "high" Catholicity group rather that of the "low". Class values seem significant in determining both the verbal attitudes and the overt social participation in such cases. The concept of "marginal Catholic," therefore, cannot be measured by using only a single continuum.
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