Abstract
During the Reagan years, the New Right has been the focus of a great deal of scholarly attention. Some have studied the secular New Right movement (Crawford, 1980); others have focused on the contributors to New Right organizations (Guth and Green, 1984a, 1984b, and 1986). Some scholars have studied the organizations of the New Right (Latus, 1983); others have examined the processes by which these New Right organizations were formed (Guth, 1983; Liebman, 1983). A good deal of work has focused on the New Christian Right. Some studies have explored the sources of support for the Christian Right in the general population (Buell and Sigelman, 1985; Wilcox, 1987a; Sigelman et al., 1987), and others have examined the activists in Christian Right organizations (Wilcox, 1987b).
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Social Sciences (miscellaneous),History
Reference43 articles.
1. Sigelman L. , Wilcox C. , and Buell E. (1987) “An unchanged minority: Popular support for the Moral Majority in 1980 and 1984.” Social Science Quarterly: 876–884.
2. Political Ideology and Religious Preference: The John Birch Society and the Americans for Democratic Action
3. Wilcox C. , Sigelman Lee , and Cook Elizabeth (forthcoming) “How hot is hot? Individual differences in responses to group feeling thermometers.” Public Opinion Quarterly.
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