Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: 01 Mar 2019

THE RELIGIOUS RIGHT IN THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA: EVANGELICAL COMMUNITIES, CRITICAL JUNCTURES, AND INSTITUTIONAL INFRASTRUCTURES*

Page Range: 95 – 113
DOI: 10.17813/1086-671X-24-1-95
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Why has the religious right been more influential in the United States than in Canada? Traditional approaches to the study of social movements focus only on the life of the movement, from emergence to decline. Instead, I conduct a historical, comparative analysis on the premovement activities of evangelical Christian communities in these two countries from 1925–1975. Employing insights from historical institutionalism, I identify two critical junctures in the historical development of evangelical communities that suppressed the entrepreneurship and institution-building activities of Canadian evangelicals relative to those in the United States. I find that these divergences in institution building affected the size and strength of the institutional infrastructures—supportive organizations, networks, and resources—of the religious right movements in these countries. I argue that historical, comparative analysis in general, and historical institutionalism in particular, is useful to social movement scholarship's understanding of crossnational movement comparisons.

Copyright: © 2019 Mobilization: An International Quarterly 2019

Contributor Notes

* I gratefully acknowledge Carrie B. Sanders and Allyson Stokes for research assistance on this project. Having worked on this project for some time, I am thankful for the opportunities to share early and incomplete versions in numerous workshops, conferences, and invited talks. I thank Rima Wilkes, Catherine Corrigall-Brown, Howard Ramos, Kathleen Rodgers, Nancy Christie, Michael Gauvreau, Greg Maney, Rachel Kutz-Flamembaum, Deanna Rohlinger, Jeff Goodwin, Jackie Smith and Robert J. Brym for offering opportunities to develop my thinking on this project. I thank Edwin Amenta for his sage advice over several conversations. I am especially grateful for helpful feedback from Neal Caren and two anonymous reviewers.

Tina Fetner is Associate Professor of Sociology at McMaster University. Please direct correspondence to tina.fetner@mcmaster.ca.
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