"Crosses and Culture Wars: Evangelicals, Catholics, and the Construction of Brazilian Democracy"
This is a closed book workshop.
Organizer:
Amy Erica Smith (PhD, University of Pittsburgh), a 2016–17 visiting fellow, is assistant professor of political science at Iowa State University. In her research, Smith asks how citizens in new and less-developed democracies learn the political information, attitudes, and behavior that make democracy work. She is particularly interested in the ways disadvantaged groups and racial and religious minorities identify their interests and seek representatives who look like and think like themselves. With a regional focus on Latin America and especially Brazil, much of her work emphasizes the importance of informal social ties and religious organizations.
At Kellogg, Smith will complete the book manuscript “The Culture Wars in Another America: Evangelicals, Catholics, and Brazilian Democracy.” She is examining why Brazilian evangelicals and Catholics have become highly active in recent Brazilian elections, but in ways distinctive from evangelicals and Catholics in the United States. Ultimately, she wants to understand how religious mobilization affects the quality of Brazilian democracy. She draws on data she collected during a Fulbright fellowship in Brazil in 2014, as well as in other survey projects.
Among Smith’s recent publications are “Talking it Out: Political Conversation and Learning in Unequal Contexts” (British Journal of Political Science, forthcoming) and “Incorporating Marginal Citizens and Voters: The Conditional Electoral Effects of Targeted Social Assistance in Latin America” (with Matthew Layton), Comparative Political Studies 48, 7 (2015).
Previously, she spent two years as a research coordinator for the Latin American Public Opinion Project at Vanderbilt University.
Amy Erica Smith
This profile was current as of 2017, when she was part of the on-campus Kellogg community.
Amy Erica Smith (PhD, University of Pittsburgh), a 2016–17 visiting fellow, is assistant professor of political science at Iowa State University. In her research, Smith asks how citizens in new and less-developed democracies learn the political information, attitudes, and behavior that make democracy work...
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