2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8373.2010.01410.x
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Alienation and obligation: Religion and social change in Samoa

Abstract: This paper will explore social change in contemporary Samoan society with respect to the traditional expectations of the church and kinship conflicting with the modern needs of an urbanising population. In the Samoan way of life – the fa'aSamoa – religion, matai (chiefly system) and reciprocal ‘gift‐giving’ kinship arrangements among the aiga (extended family) are fundamental and closely related elements. However, pressures from continued integration into the global economy, the importance of remittance income… Show more

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Cited by 56 publications
(78 citation statements)
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“…A significant proportion of remittances is also allocated to church donations and related activities (12 %). Religion plays a central role in shaping Samoan society and people's everyday life (Thornton et al 2010). This result fits with other studies emphasizing the importance of the 'sociocultural use' of remittances in Samoa (Walker and Brown 1995).…”
Section: What Are Remittances Used For?supporting
confidence: 86%
“…A significant proportion of remittances is also allocated to church donations and related activities (12 %). Religion plays a central role in shaping Samoan society and people's everyday life (Thornton et al 2010). This result fits with other studies emphasizing the importance of the 'sociocultural use' of remittances in Samoa (Walker and Brown 1995).…”
Section: What Are Remittances Used For?supporting
confidence: 86%
“…In a community that is very familyorientated, providing money to an extended family is an integral part of Samoan culture (Thornton, Kerslake & Binns 2010). Another SICA representative argued that employing people in rural and village areas had a positive impact on the wider community:…”
Section: Social Cohesion and Leadershipmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…What is apparent from the census data, however, is that membership for mainline churches (Congregational, Methodist, Catholic) is slowly declining while membership in evangelical churches and other lotu fou (The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (LDS), Jehovah's Witnesses, Seventh-day Adventists) is slowly increasing (see Samoan Bureau of Statistics 2012 for comparative data from 1981 through 2011). The slow exodus from mainline churches to evangelical churches is usually explained by two factors: changed worship styles and giving practices (Thornton et al 2010;Besnier 2011;Macpherson and Macpherson 2011). 3 Despite the growth of Pentecostal churches, leaving mainline churches for Pentecostal churches is difficult because, as many of my interlocutors have said, 'if you leave the [family] church, you leave the family'.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%