Shai Ori
Department of Economics, University of Haifa, 199 Aba Khoushy Ave. Mount Carmel, Haifa, Israel.
Soc Sci Med. 2022 Mar;296:114769. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.114769. Epub 2022 Feb 4.
This study examines how armed conflict affects individuals' religious behaviors (e.g., praying) and beliefs. The direction of the effect is theoretically not clear: war exposure may strengthen individuals' religiosity. Alternatively, after war exposure, individuals may stop following religion, and decrease their faith in God. To assess the direction of this effect, this study examines individuals' religiosity before and after a war between Israel and a Lebanese terror organization in 2006. Using both longitudinal and cross-section datasets, I find that being exposed to war or residing in war-affected regions increases individuals' religious behaviors and beliefs. These results are more pronounced among lower-educated individuals and among those who were not religious prior to the violence. Exploring possible mechanisms, I show that individuals become more religious as a means for coping with the adverse psychological effects of the war. Placebo tests using the pre-war period and individuals' views unrelated to war exposure strengthen my main findings.
本研究考察武装冲突如何影响个人的宗教行为(如祈祷)和信仰。理论上,这种影响的方向并不明确:经历战争可能会增强个人的宗教虔诚度。或者,经历战争后,个人可能会停止信奉宗教,并减少对上帝的信仰。为了评估这种影响的方向,本研究考察了2006年以色列与一个黎巴嫩恐怖组织之间的战争前后个人的宗教虔诚度。通过使用纵向和横截面数据集,我发现经历战争或居住在受战争影响地区会增加个人的宗教行为和信仰。这些结果在受教育程度较低的个人以及在暴力事件发生前不信教的人群中更为明显。在探究可能的机制时,我表明个人变得更加虔诚是应对战争带来的负面心理影响的一种方式。使用战前时期和与战争经历无关的个人观点进行的安慰剂检验强化了我的主要发现。