Paul Froese, Ph.D.

Professor of Sociology, Director of Baylor Religion Surveys

  • Waco TX UNITED STATES

Dr. Froese focuses on the sociology of meaning, religion, comparative historical sociology, political sociology and ideology.

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Biography

Dr. Paul Froese is a professor of sociology and a research fellow for the Institute for Studies of Religion. He has been teaching and researching at Baylor since 2002. A prolific author of books and articles, his research interests include the sociology of meaning, religion, comparative historical sociology, political sociology and ideology.

Areas of Expertise

Sociology
Religion
Religion Politics & Culture
Society's Images of God
Russians and Religious Ideology
Social Sciences and Study of Religion
Public Opinion
Polling
Elections
Public Policy

Education

University of Washington

Ph.D.

Sociology

University of Washington

M.A.

Sociology

University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee

M.A.

Philosophy

1992

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Media Appearances

Making Meaning Episode 14: The Challenge of Choice

Ministry of Ideas  online

2023-02-17

AUDIO: Paul Froese, Ph.D., professor of sociology at Baylor and director of the Baylor Religion Surveys, is guest on this podcast to discuss his most recent book, “On Purpose: How We Create the Meaning of Life,” amid a vast range of choices that makes it hard to know what to believe or where we belong.

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Do You ‘Matter’ to Others? The Answer Could Predict Your Mental Health

Scientific American  online

2022-10-06

This article about the psychological construct of mattering gauging the risk of depression, suicide and other disorders cites research by Baylor sociologists Rebecca Bonhag, Ph.D., and Paul Froese, Ph.D., who found that both men and women derive a sense of mattering from close relationships, but women do so more than men from their roles as parents and close friends.

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Has the gun become a sacred object in America?

The Christian Science Monitor  online

2022-06-06

Paul Froese, Ph.D., professor of sociology and director of the Baylor Religion Surveys, is quoted in this article about the rise of the gun as a symbol of Christian identity.

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Articles

Associations among religiousness, social attitudes, and prejudice in a national random sample of American adults

Psychology of Religion and Spirituality

2009

Psychologists have devoted considerable theoretical and empirical attention to the scientific study of social attitudes and prejudice. Most of these studies were conducted with relatively small, nonrepresentative samples of college students. In this study, the authors analyzed self-report data from a random probability sample with over 1500 American adults. Participants answered questions about their religiousness, right-wing authoritarianism (RWA), political ideology, demographic characteristics, and attitudes toward persons in historically disadvantaged social groups (i.e., ethnic minorities and homosexual individuals)...

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UNRAVELING RELIGIOUS WORLDVIEWS: The Relationship between Images of God and Political Ideology in a Cross-Cultural Analysis

The Sociological Quarterly

2008

Not only do few studies address the issue of how religious belief relates to political ideology, but little attempt has also been made to analyze this relationship from a comparative perspective. Using data from the International Social Survey Program, we examine how images of God, as measured by God's perceived level of engagement and authority, relate to political ideology in seven Western industrial and postindustrial societies. We find that variation in images of God has no effect on whether individuals are politically liberal or conservative in five of seven countries. Nonetheless, beliefs about God are strongly related to abortion and sexual morality attitudes in every country, but only sporadically related to ideas about social and economic justice. In the end, we argue that theological beliefs tend to be unrelated to a general measure of political ideology, not because religious beliefs are politically unimportant in these societies, but rather because religious perspectives are rarely fully liberal or conservative in their political orientation. In addition, we find that Americans hold unique views of God in comparison to other countries in our sample and that the American tendency to view God as more active and authoritative affects policy attitudes in ways contrary to the effects of church attendance.

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American Piety 2005: Content and Methods of the Baylor Religion Survey

Journal For the Scientific Study of Religion

2007

The Baylor Religion Survey (BRS) is a national population survey of religious characteristics, orientations, and attitudes modeled after the General Social Survey. This article provides an overview of the content of the 2005 BRS along with a detailed description of our methods of data collection and some descriptive characteristics from our sample of 1,721 adults in the United States. A third of the survey is dedicated solely to religion items focusing on affiliation, identity, belief, experience, and commitment...

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