Faith, Politics, and Power: The Politics of Faith-Based Initiatives

Research output: Contribution to conferencePresentation

Abstract

During the 2000 presidential campaign, George W. Bush made faith-based social services one of the centerpieces of his domestic agenda. These "faith-based initiatives," supporters argued, would reduce poverty, ease the strain on an overburdened welfare system, and prove more effective than government programs. Opponents feared rampant proselytizing with government funds. Instead, these practices created a system in which neither the greatest hopes of its supporters, nor the greatest fears of its opponents, have been realized. The product of five years of in-depth research, Rebecca Sager's Faith, Politics, and Power offers a systematic examination of where and how these programs were implemented, arguing that faith-based initiatives strayed from supporters' original aim of helping the poor, and instead were used as tools to gain political power by the Republican Party and the conservative evangelical movement.
Original languageAmerican English
StatePublished - Sep 18 2012
EventFaculty Pub Night -
Duration: Sep 18 2012 → …

Other

OtherFaculty Pub Night
Period9/18/12 → …

Keywords

  • Republican Party
  • faith-based initiatives
  • conservative

Disciplines

  • American Politics
  • Religion
  • Sociology

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