Inherited or acquired secularity?

Secular identity among post-Muslims and post-Christians in Sweden

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37062/sf.59.23768

Keywords:

secular identity, Islam, secular Muslims and Christians, family background, religion, secularization

Abstract

Sweden is both secularised and multi-religious. This article analyses the secularity of Swedes with Muslim and Christian family backgrounds. Survey data were collected from people living in Sweden with a family background in Iraq, Iran, Yugoslavia, or Turkey, as well as from a control group of Swedish origin. We first present the extent to which respondents agree with the statement “I see myself as secular (non-religious)”. This is followed by an exploratory regression analysis of what is associated with self-identification as secular. Country of origin and secularity in the immediate family were the variables that correlate most clearly with a secular self-image. Length of residence in Sweden, exposure to majority Swedish culture and socio-economic factors also have some influence. We conclude that secularity is mainly something that Swedes with a Muslim family background bring with them from their countries of origin, rather than something that they acquire in Sweden. The article concludes with a discussion that opens up the results for further theorising in the field of secularisation studies.

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Published

2023-03-09

How to Cite

Thurfjell, David, and Erika Erika. 2023. “Inherited or Acquired Secularity? Secular Identity Among Post-Muslims and Post-Christians in Sweden”. Sociologisk Forskning 59 (4):417–446. https://doi.org/10.37062/sf.59.23768.

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