Abstract

Despite widespread scholarly interest in values and attitudes among Muslim populations, relatively little work has focused on specific attitudes popularly thought to indicate anti-modern or anti-liberal tendencies within Islam. In this article, we use data from the Pew Research Center from 2008-2012 to examine support for violent practices among Muslims in thirty-five countries. Support for violent practices is defined by three questions on the acceptability of killing apostates, the stoning of adulterers, and severe corporal punishment for thieves. Using multilevel models that capture country-level variability, we analyze the relationship between support for violent practices and education, religiosity, and development. In general, we find that support for violent practices is less common among individuals with more education and less religiosity and who come from more developed countries. However, when we examine variation across countries, we see evidence of substantial heterogeneity in the association of education and religiosity with support for violent practices. We find that education is more liberalizing in more liberal countries and in less developed countries. The effects of religiosity are also related to country-level context but vary depending on how religiosity is measured. Overall, the variation we observe across countries calls into question a civilizational approach to studying values among Muslim populations and points to a more detailed multiple modernities approach.

Highlights

  • In a viral appearance on the HBO Show “Real Time with Bill Maher” in 2014, actor Ben Affleck became embroiled in an unexpected debate with host Bill Maher and fellow guest, Sam Harris, over the allegedly authoritarian and violent tendencies of Islamic doctrine [1]

  • Maher offered data from a recent poll of Muslims worldwide conducted by the Pew Research Center which showed that “like 90%” of Egyptian Muslims supported death as a punishment for leaving the faith

  • From the basic expectation of modernization theory, we develop our first hypothesis: H1: The level of development in a country is negatively associated with support for violent practices

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Summary

Introduction

In a viral appearance on the HBO Show “Real Time with Bill Maher” in 2014, actor Ben Affleck became embroiled in an unexpected debate with host Bill Maher and fellow guest, Sam Harris, over the allegedly authoritarian and violent tendencies of Islamic doctrine [1]. One of the leading figures in the New Atheist movement, argued that Islam “at this moment is the motherlode of bad ideas.”. To support this view, Maher offered data from a recent poll of Muslims worldwide conducted by the Pew Research Center which showed that “like 90%” of Egyptian Muslims supported death as a punishment for leaving the faith. Industrialization and economic growth bring about higher educational attainment, greater differentiation in the occupational workforce, urbanization, and higher standards of living [17] All of these factors contribute to a shift from conservative and authoritarian values to liberal values that promote individual autonomy and self-determination [15]. Rationalization, individualism, and cultural pluralism reduce the significance of religious institutions in favor of secular institutions, diminishing the role of religion in social life [18,19,20]

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