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Replication Data for: Do Protestant Missionaries Undermine Political Authority? Evidence from Peru

Harvard Dataverse (Africa Rice Center, Bioversity International, CCAFS, CIAT, IFPRI, IRRI and WorldFish)

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Title Replication Data for: Do Protestant Missionaries Undermine Political Authority? Evidence from Peru
 
Identifier https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/B075NQ
 
Creator Rink, Anselm
 
Publisher Harvard Dataverse
 
Description The relation between religious organizations and political authority is notoriously tense. Max Weber argued that this is because both compete over the same resource: human commitment. This article revisits Weber’s hypothesis. Specifically, we explore two psychological mechanisms through which Protestant missionaries affect political authority: obedience and persuadability. Exploiting exogenous variation in missionary activity in Peru, we demonstrate that missionaries make converts more obedient, which we attribute to a theological and a social mechanism. Yet, we also find that missionaries make converts less susceptible to persuasion by political authorities because they shift attention from secular topics to questions of theological importance, and endorse a skeptical stance towards the government. Exploiting variation in treatment intensity, we argue that the degree to which political authority is affected depends on a given mission’s theological strictness. We arrive at these findings by combining experimental outcomes and process-tracing evidence using Bayesian integration.
 
Subject Social Sciences
Religion; Experiment; Missionaries
 
Contributor Rink, Anselm