Religion as a Meaning System: Policy Implications for the New Millennium |
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Authors: | Kenneth I. Maton Daniel Dodgen Mariano R. Sto. Domingo David B. Larson |
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Affiliation: | University of Maryland, Baltimore County; Washington, D.C.; University of Maryland, Baltimore County; National Institute for Healthcare Research |
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Abstract: | The development of social policy related to religion has received increasing focus in recent years, yet psychology continues to play a relatively minor role in this important domain. In the current article, religion's positive and negative influences as a meaning system on individual, community, and societal well-being are delineated. The challenges facing psychology in contributing to public policy development in the religious arena are examined, challenges that stem from profound differences in the meaning systems of religion, government, and psychology. These challenges notwithstanding, a number of different pathways in the domains of applied research, community practice, and policy development are delineated through which psychology can help to maximize positive, and minimize negative, outcomes in the religion and social policy arena. |
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