Political Parties and Religion in Post-Communist Poland

ebook BASEES/Routledge Series on Russian and East European Studies

By Aleks Szczerbiak

cover image of Political Parties and Religion in Post-Communist Poland

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This book examines the role of religion and the Catholic Church in post-communist Polish politics. It outlines the special circumstances of Poland, a country with very high levels of religiosity, where the Catholic Church played a crucial role in the process that led to the collapse of communism in 1989.

Based on extensive original research, the book highlights the great complexity in the relationship, with some parties actively associating themselves with the Church's moral authority, whilst at the same time many Poles oppose key elements of the Church's public policy agenda, and some parties mobilise politically around anti-clericalism. By examining this important country case study, the work also contributes to the broader comparative-theoretical literature on parties and religion enhancing our understanding of how parties in modern European democracies relate to religious groupings, particularly how they attempt to mobilise political and electoral support around the religious-secular divide. It thereby helps us to understand the role that religion has played in contemporary European party politics.

As a definitive grounded empirical examination of the role of religion and politics in post-1989 Poland, this study will be of interest to scholars of Central and East European Studies, Eastern European Politics, Religion and Politics.

Political Parties and Religion in Post-Communist Poland