Not exact matches
«A study in the United States, published in the Social
Forces journal and conducted by Sociology researcher Lisa A. Keister while she was at the Ohio State University, found that adherents of Judaism attained the most wealth, believers of Catholicism and mainline
Protestants were in the middle, while
conservative Protestants accu - mulated the least wealth, while in general people who attend religious services achieved more wealth than those who do not (taking into account variations of education and other factors).
It turns out that culturally
conservative Protestants in Brazil (mostly Pentecostals, I suspect, though the author of this article calls them evangelicals) have
forced the newly elected president, Catholic (and former Marxist guerilla) Dilma Rousseff, to move sharply rightward in her positions on....
Other religious expressions and traditions were almost
forced off the air totally by these (now) wealthy
conservative Protestant organizations.
But this generalization is true only when paternal engagement, emotional expressiveness, warmth and praise are figured into the equation,
Conservative Protestant men have a way to go in demonstrating fairness with their wives, who increasingly choose to be in the paid work
force.