University Press of America
Pages: 252
Trim: 5½ x 8½
978-0-7618-0040-8 • Paperback • October 1995 • $76.99 • (£59.00)
Satya R. Pattnayak is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Villanova University.
Chapter 1 Social Change, Political Competition, and Religious Innovation in Latin America: An Introduction
Chapter 2 Religious Change, Empowerment and Power: Reflections on Latin American Experience
Chapter 3 The Transformation of Catholic Social Thought in Latin America: Christian Democracy, Liberation Theology, and the New Catholic Right
Chapter 4 The Chilean Church and the Transition to Democracy
Chapter 5 From Theologies of Liberation to Theologies of Inculturation: Aymara Catechists and the Second Evangelization in Highlands Bolivia
Chapter 6 Religious Competition in Contemporary Venezuela
Chapter 7 Brazil: State Subsidization and the Church Since 1930
Chapter 8 Latin American Politics: Exit the Catholic Church?
Chapter 9 The Embeddedness of Religion and Politics: An Epilogue
Chapter 10 Appendix: The Institutional Capacity of the Catholic Church: An Evaluation; Select Bibliography
Chapter 11 Contributors
Chapter 12 Index
The present volume serves as a useful corrective to the flood of impressionistic works and reflects the increasing maturation of the field...it provides a solid basis for understanding the actual role of religion, and particularly the Catholic Church,in contemporary Latin America...[the book] provides not only a realistic view of the role of religion in contemporary Latin America, but also a healthy critique of much of the literature in the field.
— Journal of Latin American Studies
An interesting analysis of new Catholic pastoral strategies in Bolivia.
— Journal of Church and State
Several of the essays suggest that the institutional capacity of the Church has diminished, to the detriment of any political role the Church might wish to play...the theme of diminishing resources (priests, funds, schools, etc.) is also addressed in a sophisticated empirical appendix compiled by the editor...these essays remind us that religion is a potentially powerful resource, but one which is capable of serving a variety of masters. Even in a setting not characterized by a legal separation of church and state, the political and theological barriers which render religious politics difficult are quite formidable.
— Sociology of Religion: A Quarterly Review
Several of the essays suggest that the institutional capacity of the Church has diminished, to the detriment of any political role the Church might wish to play...the theme of diminishing resources (priests, funds, schools, etc.) is also addressed in a sophisticated empirical appendix compiled by the editor...these essays remind us that religion is a potentially powerful resource, but one which is capable of serving a variety of masters. Even in a setting not characterized by a legal separation of church and state, the political and theological barriers which render religious politics difficult are quite formidable.
— Sociology of Religion: A Quarterly Review
The present volume serves as a useful corrective to the flood of impressionistic works and reflects the increasing maturation of the field...it provides a solid basis for understanding the actual role of religion, and particularly the Catholic Church, in contemporary Latin America...[the book] provides not only a realistic view of the role of religion in contemporary Latin America, but also a healthy critique of much of the literature in the field.
— Journal of Latin American Studies
An interesting analysis of new Catholic pastoral strategies in Bolivia.
— Journal of Church and State