Abstract
Research has increasingly highlighted the importance of business leaders allowing people to bring their whole selves to work. And religion is an important part of the whole self for many. However, we lack the large-scale national data needed to explore how Americans see the connections between religion and work. Here, from “Faith at Work: An Empirical Study”—a novel, nationally representative dataset—we explore the extent to which working Americans (N = 8767) see their work as a spiritual calling and/or experience work conflict because of their religious faith. We find that one fifth of workers identify their work as a spiritual calling. Our findings also suggest that experiences of religious conflict and discrimination are shaped not only by religious beliefs, but also social location. The initial results highlight future avenues for research and demonstrate the potential of the “Faith at Work” data to shed further light on how religion enters the workplace.
Reference62 articles.
1. Race or Religion: Louisiana Judge Looks to History on Jewish Discrimination in the Workplacehttps://www.humanrightsfirst.org/blog/race-or-religion-louisiana-judge-looks-history-jewish-discrimination-workplace
2. Standard Definitions: Final Dispositions of Case Codes and Outcome Rates for Surveyshttps://www.aapor.org/AAPOR_Main/media/publications/Standard-Definitions20169theditionfinal.pdf
3. Finding Religion in Everyday Life
4. Religion, social class, and entrepreneurial choice
5. A Meta-Analysis of Hiring Discrimination Against Muslims and Arabs
Cited by
12 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献