STRATEGIC ALLIANCES: THE POLITICAL EFFICACY OF RELIGIOUSSECULAR TIES*
This multimethod study investigates strategic collaboration in alliances connecting politically engaged religious and secular social movement organizations. We assess the impact of religious-secular strategic alliances on movement political efficacy by analyzing data from a national survey of the community organizing field to compare organizations that do/do not participate in religious-secular alliances. The conceptual framework draws on the literatures in social movements, political sociology, and organizational sociology to argue that political efficacy is fundamentally shaped by an organization's strategic capacity and mobilizing capacity. We analyze four organizational outputs that serve as indicators of strategic capacity and find that participating in religious-secular alliances is associated with greater strategic capacity but lower mobilizing capacity. A complementary ethnographic case study identifies likely mechanisms underlying both findings. Our analysis suggests that collaboration across the religious-secular divide can increase a movement’s political efficacy within a democratic polity but with accompanying complexities that participants must manage.
Contributor Notes
† Authors hereby appreciate fine critical readings by colleagues at UNM, IU, LMU, and an audience at the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion (SSSR); and by anonymous reviewers and the editor of this journal. We gratefully acknowledge primary funding provided by the National Science Foundation and Interfaith Funders, along with secondary grants from the Hearst Foundation, Society for the Scientific Study of Religion, Loyola Marymount University and LMU’s Bellarmine College of Liberal Arts, Louisville Institute, Religious Research Association, William K. Kellogg Foundation, Center for the Study of Philanthropy and Voluntarism, Duke University’s Graduate School and Department of Sociology, and the Haynes Foundation. The authors thank Elisabeth Andrews for providing expert editorial assistance.