Handbook of the Sociology of Religion
Jewish Identity in the United States and Israel 245 Population Survey (NJPS 2000), relying on questions asked in NJPS 1990, arri ...
246 Arnold Dashefsky, Bernard Lazerwitz, Ephraim Tabory by measurements of affiliation and attachment as well as attitudinal mea ...
Jewish Identity in the United States and Israel 247 Such a change has led Charles Liebman (2001) to suggest that American Jews h ...
248 Arnold Dashefsky, Bernard Lazerwitz, Ephraim Tabory Both Jewish education and to a lesser extent, Jewish background operate ...
Jewish Identity in the United States and Israel 249 Of the total of 40 percent of the variance explained, 24 percent came from c ...
250 Arnold Dashefsky, Bernard Lazerwitz, Ephraim Tabory Men have always played the dominant, higher status role in organized Jew ...
Jewish Identity in the United States and Israel 251 when Orthodox women undertake religious studies, they are exposed to a diffe ...
252 Arnold Dashefsky, Bernard Lazerwitz, Ephraim Tabory Table 18.1.Contrasting Jews of America and Israel on Religiosity Orienta ...
Jewish Identity in the United States and Israel 253 Table 18.2.Contrasting Jews of America and Israel on Synagogue Attendance Is ...
254 Arnold Dashefsky, Bernard Lazerwitz, Ephraim Tabory Even the not religious, European descent Israeli Jews have more home rel ...
Jewish Identity in the United States and Israel 255 a high degree of residential migration and mobility. Research based on the 1 ...
256 Arnold Dashefsky, Bernard Lazerwitz, Ephraim Tabory of such marriages are raised as Jews (Mayer 1985: 245–7). A crucial fact ...
Jewish Identity in the United States and Israel 257 assembly in 1978, warmly supports Israel and calls on its members to visit I ...
258 Arnold Dashefsky, Bernard Lazerwitz, Ephraim Tabory “religious,” “traditional,” or “nonreligious,” but not whether one is Je ...
Jewish Identity in the United States and Israel 259 added to a growing database through which studies of the dimensions of Jewis ...
260 Arnold Dashefsky, Bernard Lazerwitz, Ephraim Tabory to rely on multiple research strategies incorporating both qualitative a ...
CHAPTER NINETEEN Beyond the Synagogue Walls Lynn Davidman For most of the twentieth century, the study of religion in the United ...
262 Lynn Davidman Hall has written, the termlived religionis not “confined to what people do,” (1997: ix) but rather, it is abou ...
Beyond the Synagogue Walls 263 considered to have stronger identities have higher incomes on the average; 41 percent live in the ...
264 Lynn Davidman incorporation of new questions that explore the meaning and nature of actions and rit- uals and address indivi ...
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