God’s Own Country
Global religious demographics are in the midst of a slow but inexorable shift.
Adrien Beauduin is currently researching a PhD on Polish and Czech politics at the Central European University’s department of gender studies.
Global religious demographics are in the midst of a slow but inexorable shift.
In a region of high inequality and Catholic dominance, Uruguay is twice an outlier.
Saudi Arabia exports oil and Islamic fundamentalism around the world.
Everything about Nigerian Pentecostalism is huge — the churches, the checkbooks, and the political clout.
Meet the princely imam financing neoliberal development in Central Asia.
Sophisticated Wall Street tactics have blessed the LDS Church with billions.
The New Atheists had reactionary politics and a distorted view of science, but they owe their demise to a more fundamental flaw in their ideology: religion can’t explain all the world’s problems.
Once marginal and reviled, evangelical Christians became a vital political bloc in the 1980s thanks to resolute organizing.
How a new religion’s pro-Trump rag became one of the world’s fastest-growing newspapers.
Blessed with celebrity congregants, the evangelical Hillsong Church was poised to take America by storm before it fell prey to sex scandals. Now megachurch America is following its blue-state blueprint.
Studying the Holy Scriptures with the leading lights of the GOP.
Crunching the numbers on the class war.
With the war in Gaza, it seems only one side’s blood and pain gets much attention in the US media.
Evangelical Christians are major supporters of Israel — because they think its existence heralds the Second Coming of Christ.
Episode 1 of Organize the Unorganized: The Rise of the CIO explores key developments that led to the CIO’s founding: the split with the AFL, the broken promises of welfare capitalism, the National Industrial Recovery Act, and the mass strikes of 1934.
Some working-class anthems are sung to the tunes of Christian hymns.
Their business is attacking China and promoting right-wing political tropes — and business is booming.
The Bible’s actual takes on wealth are not what you might think.