| Literature DB >> 35252743 |
Abstract
This contribution to the special issue on religion and migration reviews two decades of large-scale survey research on changes in immigrant religion and the relationship between immigrants' level of religiosity and their integration into European societies. The body of work reveals that Muslims in European societies stand out due to their comparatively high levels of religiosity and greater stability in religiosity over time and across immigrant generations. While the comparative picture is rather clear, findings regarding the long-term trend in Muslims' religiosity and its association with immigrant integration are instead inconclusive. A systematic review of empirical studies of the association of (various indicators of) individual religiosity with immigrant integration reveals positive, negative and non-significant results for all outcomes and domains. Thus, based on the current state of art it is hard to assess whether and why religion forms a bridge or barrier to immigrant integration in Europe. To move the field forward, the contribution ends with a twofold proposal for a research agenda that includes a broadened empirical scope, moving beyond the focus on Sunni Muslims, and a conceptual extension that focuses on differences in reasoning about religion and religious meaning-making as additional, potentially more consistent and more powerful explanation for immigrants' social relations and positions in their new societies.Entities:
Keywords: Integration; Migration; Religion; Religiosity; Religious attitudes; Religious cognition
Year: 2022 PMID: 35252743 PMCID: PMC8889873 DOI: 10.1007/s41682-022-00103-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Z Relig Ges Polit ISSN: 2510-1226
Overview of studies on the relationship between religiosity and immigrant integration
| Author(s) (year) | Data source | Sample | Religiosity measure(s) | Integration measure(s) | Association religiosity—integration: +/0/− | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Structural integration | Van Tubergen ( | IFIS (harmonised migrant surveys in 8 destination countries) | Nationally representative samples of immigrants (foreign-born) | Religious affiliation (yes/no), service attendance (once a week or more vs. less) | Schooling, labour force status | −: the employed and higher educated are less likely to be affiliated and to attend services frequently |
| Van Tubergen ( | SPVA 1998, 2002 | First-generation immigrants from Turkey, Morocco, Suriname and the Dutch Antilles | Religious affiliation, religious attitudes (4 items), service attendance | Employed, educated in receiving country, highest level of education, language proficiency | 0: affiliation with educated in receiving country, language skills −: affiliation with employed, level of education, religious attitudes and practices with language proficiency | |
| Phalet et al. ( | SPVA 1998 + 2002, LAS 2005 | Self-identified Muslims of Turkish and Moroccan origin | Service attendance, preference for religious school, preference for co-religious partner of one’s daughter | Educational attainment, employment status | −: higher education and working status are negatively related to all indicators of religiosity | |
| Diehl and Koenig ( | Generations and Gender Survey (Germany) | 18–79 year old German speakers and Turkish citizens | Religious affiliation (Christian, Muslim, none), high religiosity (defined as 2 out 3: weekly or more frequent service attendance, agrees that religious rituals during life-course events are important and that religion is an important goal in child-rearing) | Educational attainment, labour market participation, language use | −: but only for the second generation. Higher educated, less religious, home-makers are more religious than employed | |
| Smits et al. ( | MHSM survey (Belgium), 1994–1996 | Self-identified Muslim men born in Turkey or Morocco, aged 18 or older | Mosque attendance (weekly or more vs. less), participated in last Ramadan, sacrificed a sheep during Eid | Level of education, job stability | −: higher educated attend mosque less frequently and less frequently sacrifice a sheep, workers with permanent contract visit mosque less, participate in Ramadan less but sacrifice more frequently 0: no relation between education and participation in Ramadan | |
| Güveli and Platt ( | SPVA (1998) & FNSEM (1993) | Self-identified Muslims (of Antillean, Moroccan, Turkish and Surinamese origin in NL, of Pakistani, Indian, Bangladeshi or East African origin in UK) | Weekly attendance at worship | Education and labour market participation, language skills | −: Netherlands 0: UK | |
| Fleischmann and Phalet ( | TIES (NL, BE, DE, SE) | Self-identified Muslims who are 2nd generation Turkish and Moroccan minorities, aged 18–35 | Latent variable containing religious identification (4 items), ritual and dietary practices (2 items each), and political religion (4 items) | Educational attainment, employment status | 0: Belgium, Netherlands and Sweden, employment status in Germany −: educational attainment in Germany | |
| Lewis and Kashyap ( | 2008–2009 Citizenship Survey (England and Wales) | Self-identified immigrant and non-immigrant Muslims and non-Muslims | Actively practicing religion (self-report) | Educational attainment and working | 0 (− among non-Muslims) | |
| Stichs and Müssig ( | Muslim Life in Germany (MLD) | 25–64 year old people with migration background in one of 49 Muslim-majority countries | Religious affiliation (Muslim, Christian, none), degree of religiosity (self-report), for Muslim women: wearing a headscarf (yes/no) | Employment status, skill level of job | − for women: Muslim affiliation, religiosity and veiling associated with lower labour market participation 0: skill level of job, men’s labour market participation | |
| Van der Bracht et al. ( | ESS round 1–4 | Migrants living in 26 European countries (Israel, Russia and Turkey excluded) | Religious affiliation, subjective religiosity, praying (once a week or more vs. less) | Educational attainment | −: with higher education, all aspects of religiosity decrease | |
| Connor and Koenig ( | ESS 2002–2012 in EU15+ countries | Self-identified Muslims and non-Muslims | Praying frequency (daily or more vs. less), service attendance (monthly or more vs. less) and importance of religion (1–10) | Employment (conditional on labour market participation) | −: prayer 0: importance of religion +: service attendance | |
| Khoudja and Fleischmann ( | Survey Integration Minorities | 16–64 year old Dutch women without migration background and with a migration background in Turkey, Morocco, Suriname, Antilles, students, retired and permanently ill participants excluded | Mean of 3 items of religious identification | Labour market participation (yes/no), number of hours worked | −: hours worked 0: labour market participation | |
| Koenig et al. ( | SCIP wave 1 & 2 | Self-identified Christian and Muslim recent immigrants from in GB (from Poland & Pakistan), Germany (Poland & Turkey), Netherlands (Poland, Bulgaria, Turkey, Morocco, Suriname, Antilles) | Service attendance monthly or more | Employment | 0 | |
| Ohlendorf et al. ( | CILS4EU (Germany) | Youth with immigrant background, aged ~14, comparing Muslims with migrant & non-migrants Protestants, Catholics, non-religious and other religions | Subjective importance of religion, service attendance (at least monthly vs. less frequently) | Education: type of school track, grades (Mathematics & German) | +: both religiosity measures and the three outcome variables | |
| Carol and Schulz ( | NEPS SC3 & SC4 (Germany) | Youth aged 10–13 and 14–17 with immigrant background and self-identified as Muslims, Christian or non-religious | Students’ and parents’ subjective religiosity, praying frequency and religious community engagement | Education: test performance (maths) | −: subjective religiosity 0: community engagement +: praying | |
| Beek and Fleischmann ( | NELLS | 1st and 2nd generation Turkish- and Moroccan-Dutch, age 15–45 | Latent construct consisting of religious identification, mosque attendance, worship practices and dietary practices | Level of education, socio-economic participation, language proficiency | −: level of education 1st generation, language proficiency 0: level of education 2nd generation, socio-economic participation | |
| Drouhot ( | Trajectoires et Origines survey (2008–9) (France) | Self-identified Muslims, Christians and non-religious persons in a representative sample of immigrants (1st and 2nd generation) aged 18–60 | Subjective importance of religion, dietary practices, service attendance, wearing a visible religious symbol | Family income | −: only for most and least deprived Muslims | |
| Social integration | Van Tubergen ( | SPVA 1998, 2002 | First-generation immigrants from Turkey, Morocco, Suriname and the Dutch Antilles | Religious affiliation, religious attitudes (4 items), service attendance | Participation in majority organisation, native partner, leisure-time contacts with natives | 0: affiliation with leisure-time contacts with natives −: affiliation, attitudes and participation with participation in majority organisation, affiliation with native partner |
| Phalet et al. ( | SPVA 1998 + 2002, LAS 2005 | Self-identified Muslims of Turkish and Moroccan origin | Service attendance, preference for religious school, preference for co-religious partner of one’s daughter | Inter-ethnic social contacts | −: for all three indicators of religiosity | |
| Güveli and Platt ( | SPVA (1998) & FNSEM (1993) | Self-identified Muslims (of Antillean, Moroccan, Turkish and Surinamese origin in NL, of Pakistani, Indian, Bangladeshi or East African origin in UK) | Weekly attendance at worship | Participation in majority-dominated association | 0 | |
| Fleischmann and Phalet ( | TIES (NL, BE, DE, SE) | Self-identified Muslims who are 2nd generation Turkish and Moroccan minorities, aged 18–35 | Latent variable containing religious identification (4 items), ritual and dietary practices (2 items each), and political religion (4 items) | Co-ethnic vs. inter-ethnic partner | 0 | |
| Maliepaard and Phalet ( | Survey Integration Minorities (2006), Netherlands | Turkish- and Moroccan-Dutch (1st and 2nd generation) self-identified Muslims | Religious practice (mosque visits, ramadan, halal), religious assertion (4 items), religious identification (3 items) | Contact with Dutch (friends/acquainances and neighbours) | − | |
| Müssig and Stichs ( | Muslim Life in Germany (MLD) | Self-identified Muslim and Christian first-generation migrants in Germany from 49 Muslim-majority origin countries | Frequency of service attendance, religiosity (self-report), acceptance of inter-religious marriage | Contact with German friends (once a week or more) | 0: service attendance and religiosity for Muslims, acceptance of inter-religious marriage for Christians +: acceptance of inter-religious marriage for Muslims, service attendance and religiosity for Christians | |
| McAndrew and Voas ( | Ethnic Minority British Election Study (2010) | British citizens of South-Asian, African and Afro-Caribbean origin | Religious denomination, religious salience, communal and private practice | Generalised Social Trust, civic engagement and voluntary activity | 0: trust +: civic engagement and volunteering | |
| Fleischmann et al. ( | NELLS | 1st and 2nd generation Turkish- and Moroccan-Dutch, age 15–45 | Religious service attendance | Participation in civic associations | + | |
| Leszczensky and Pink ( | Friendship & identity in school, wave 1–3 | German (NRW) youth (~ 13 years) with and without immigrant background | Religious affiliation, High religiosity (daily or more frequent prayer, religious identification 3 or higher) | Friendship nominations | 0 level of religiosity +: affiliation (having the same affiliation increases the likelihood of friendship nominations) | |
| Maliepaard and Schacht ( | SCIP, wave 1 & 2 | Recent immigrants from Turkey to Germany and the Netherlands, and from Pakistan to England | Religious service attendance, prayer frequency (repeated measures: before migration, 2 × after migration) | Frequency of contact with host country natives | 0 | |
| Beek and Fleischmann ( | NELLS | 1st and 2nd generation Turkish- and Moroccan-Dutch, age 15–45 | Latent construct consisting of religious identification, mosque attendance, worship practices and dietary practices | Superficial contact with Dutch, Dutch friends | −: Dutch friends 0: superficial contacts | |
| Müssig ( | German data from European Social Survey, round 1–7 + Polity IV | Persons with and without a migration background aged 18 or older | Religious affiliation, religious service attendance (once a month or more vs. less), self-rated religiosity (high vs. low) | Participation in last election, participation in non-electoral political activities (protest-oriented and party-based) | −: affiliation (Muslims are less politically active that non-Muslims) 0: service attendance and political participation (limited to people with migration background) | |
| Simsek et al. ( | CILS4EU, wave 1 (England, Germany, Netherlands, Sweden) | Youth (~ 15 years) with and without migration background | Frequency of service attendance, frequency of prayer, subjective importance of religion | Friendship nominations & negative ties | −: Youth who are dissimilar in religiosity and religious affiliation are less likely to be friends | |
| Cultural integration | Verkuyten and Yildiz ( | Community samples of Turkish-Dutch participants (born in the Netherlands with both parents born in Turkey) | Study 2: 171 self-identified Sunni Muslims, Study 3: 191 self-identified Muslims | Religious identification (6 items) (Study 2 & 3), religious behavioural involvement (4 items), support for religious organisations (4 items) (Study 3 only) | National identification (3 items) | −: religious identification/importance, 0: behavioural involvement and political religion |
| Diehl et al. ( | Generations and Gender Survey (Germany) | 18–79 year old German speakers and Turkish citizens | Religious affiliation (Christian, Muslim, none), high religiosity (defined as 2 out 3: weekly or more frequent service attendance, agrees that religious rituals during life-course events are important and that religion is an important goal in child-rearing) | Approval of gender equality (index of 5 items) | − | |
| Güveli and Platt ( | SPVA (1998) & FNSEM (1993) | Self-identified Muslims (of Antillean, Moroccan, Turkish and Surinamese origin in NL, of Pakistani, Indian, Bangladeshi or East African origin in UK) | Weekly attendance at worship | National identification | 0: Netherlands +: UK | |
| Lewis and Kashyap ( | Faith Matters (FM): British Muslims (2009) | Self-identified Muslims in areas with at least 10% Muslim inhabitants across Great Britain | Religious practices and beliefs (3 items each) | Attitudes towards gender equality, sexual minority rights, abortion, divorce, premarital sex | − | |
| Scheible and Fleischmann ( | TIES-Belgium | 2nd generation Turkish and Moroccan Belgians in Antwerp and Brussels, aged 18–35, who are self-identified Muslims | Composite containing identification (4 items), practices and belief orthodoxy (2 items) | Approval of gender equality (3 items) | − (stronger among men than women) | |
| Becher and El-Menouar ( | BAMF survey (2013) | Christians and Muslims with migration background in Germany, non-migrant Germans | Subjective religiosity, religious participation, participation in rituals, importance of religion | Attitudes towards gender roles, gender equality and premarital sex, gendered division of labour within households | − | |
| Maxwell and Bleich ( | Trajectoires et Origines Suryey (France) | Self-identified Muslims | Composite measure comprising subjective importance of religion, dietary practices, service attendance, wearing a visible religious symbol | National identification (“I feel French”, dichotomised) | − | |
| Torrekens and Jacobs ( | EURISLAM | Muslims with origin from Morocco, Turkey, Pakistan, ex-Yugoslavia in CH, BEL, FR, GER, NL, UK and non-Muslim majority comparison group | Mean of religious identification, service attendance and prayer | Role of religion in society—distance from natives | − | |
| Eskelinen and Verkuyten ( | EURISLAM | Self-identified Muslims from Morocco, Turkey, Pakistan and ex-Yugoslavia in Belgium, Germany, Switzerland and UK + comparison sample of Christian natives | Religious identification (2 items), and religious practices (prayer, attendance, hair cover, no alcohol, celebrating holy days, wearing religious symbols, following dietary restrictions) | Support for democracy (2 items) and liberal sexual mores (4 items) | − | |
| Fleischmann and Phalet ( | CILS4EU + LeuvenCILS | Youth (~ 14) with and without migration background in England, Germany, Netherlands, Sweden and Flanders | Religious affiliation (Christian, Muslim, other, non-religious), frequency of service attendance, frequency of prayer, subjective importance of religion | National identification | − | |
| Kogan and Weißmann ( | CILS4EU, wave 1 & 3 (England, Germany, Netherlands, Sweden) | 1st, 2nd, and 3rd or higher immigrant generation youth aged ~ 15 | Religious denomination, subjective importance of religion | Acceptance of premarital cohabitation | − | |
| Beek and Fleischmann ( | NELLS | 1st and 2nd generation Turkish- and Moroccan-Dutch, age 15–45 | Latent construct consisting of religious identification, mosque attendance, worship practices and dietary practices | Gender egalitarianism, sexual liberalism, national identification | −: sexual liberalism 0: gender egalitarianism, national identification |
Studies marked with a examine more than one dimension of immigrant integration and are therefore listed repeatedly. The organisation of outcomes into structural, social and cultural dimensions of immigrant integration is imperfect. Some indicators could be argued to belong to multiple dimensions (e.g. language proficiency, currently listed under structural) and some outcomes could be considered a separate dimension (e.g. political participation) but were not listed separately due to a lack of relevant studies