2022
DOI: 10.1037/pspi0000363
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Is LGBT progress seen as an attack on Christians?: Examining Christian/sexual orientation zero-sum beliefs.

Abstract: The authors thank John Oliver Siy and reviewers for helpful comments on previous drafts. All materials, data and preregistered hypotheses can be found on OSF at the following link: https://osf.io/7sxch/?view_only=c90efeb33cd8432183c6d4eda8603efc.

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Cited by 31 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…Through this work, we demonstrate that status threat applies not just to racial identities but to other advantaged group memberships, namely religion-an important and understudied social identity (Ysseldyk et al, 2010). These findings also contribute to the existing body of research on identity threat and demographic shifts (which mostly centers on race) and provide evidence, consistent with Wilkins et al (2021), that changing religious demographics evoke perceived threat to religion and religious freedoms. We note that unlike Wilkins et al (2021), our experimental manipulations did not explicitly mention culture wars or related themes.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 70%
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“…Through this work, we demonstrate that status threat applies not just to racial identities but to other advantaged group memberships, namely religion-an important and understudied social identity (Ysseldyk et al, 2010). These findings also contribute to the existing body of research on identity threat and demographic shifts (which mostly centers on race) and provide evidence, consistent with Wilkins et al (2021), that changing religious demographics evoke perceived threat to religion and religious freedoms. We note that unlike Wilkins et al (2021), our experimental manipulations did not explicitly mention culture wars or related themes.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 70%
“…We note that this analysis was not preregistered. These results provide strong evidence that demographic shifts evoke threat for American Christians (consistent with Wilkins et al, 2021), 2 weak evidence in favor of the hypothesis that demographic threats increase Christian nationalism among Christian Americans, and strong evidence that self-reported religious threat perceptions are associated with Christian nationalist beliefs. Results also suggest that increased threat indirectly accounts for heightened Christian nationalism.…”
Section: Figure 1 Mean Differences Between Experimental (Religious Demographic Shift) and Control Condition On Religious Threat And Chrissupporting
confidence: 51%
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