Skip to main content

Announcement Bar

​Sustain the research & strategy needed to defeat authoritarianism. 
Become a monthly donor to PRA & RD today​.

Search

Browse the largest online archive of research, analysis and commentary on the far right.

Displaying 13128 results

Results

Religion Dispatches
But takes a hard line on promiscuity—otherwise known as “dating”?
Article
Religion Dispatches
We cannot trust the police, we cannot trust people on the subway, and Mayor Bloomberg fiddles.
Article
Religion Dispatches
This is not a story about Manti Te’o.
Article
Religion Dispatches
Beyond Christian-gay gridlock… awaits a robust national faith conversation.
Article
Religion Dispatches
Dueling press conferences make it clear God will have a big role in marriage push.
Article
Religion Dispatches
Count on US religious right leaders to raise hell about human rights ruling.
Article
Religion Dispatches
As with periodic surveys showing relationships between levels of religiosity and well-being, this latest research is apt to find its way into many a sermon at declining churches across the U.K. and its former colonies. The gist (perhaps under a veneer of Christian pity): “There ya go! Your fakey-fakey, sage-burning, labyrinth-walking, church-of-the-blessed-ME ‘spirituality’ doesn’t make you happy.” Throw in some (largely inconclusive) studies on prayer and healing, an the result seems fairly obvious: Traditional believers are happier, healthier, and a heck of a lot saner. So there!
Article
Religion Dispatches
Western experts, looking for a comprehensible narrative, mistake consistency for fact. The misconceptions are further compounded by how difficult it is to identify a potential suicide—even mental health professionals can get it wrong—and how easy it is to conflate suicide terrorists with regular terrorists, the vast majority of whom don’t strap on bombs, preferring to stay alive and fight.
Article
Religion Dispatches
“We increasingly look prejudiced, and not a little stupid, on this issue,” GOP insider admits.
Article
Religion Dispatches
Across South Carolina—and indeed the country—voters attend tiny churches, Bible studies, and prayer meetings. Their collective views on the candidates are much more difficult to measure and assess. And while they may be consumers of Christian talk radio, or televangelism, or other religious media, they are not lock-step followers of the decisions of elites who met at a ranch in Texas, or of Jim Bob Duggar, or of anything but their own received revelation.
Article