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Profiling Catholic death-penalty foes
By John Monczunski

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Nearly three out of four Americans support capital punishment. Even though Roman Catholic Church teaching opposes the death penalty, the same percentage of support holds true among U.S. Catholics.

In a recent paper using data from the Notre Dame Study of Catholic Parish Life, sociologists Michael Welch of Notre Dame and Thoroddur Bjarnason of the University at Albany-SUNY, sort out the demographics of U.S. Catholics who oppose the death penalty.

Welch, chairman of the Department of Sociology, and Bjarnason found that black, female and unmarried Catholics are more likely to oppose the death penalty than white, male and married parishioners. White Catholics in traditional black parishes also are more likely to oppose capital punishment. The sociologists speculate that these white Catholics may be more influenced by black arguments about racial bias in imposition of the death penalty. They also found that support for capital punishment decreases with advancing age and higher education.

Significantly, their analysis revealed that Catholics are less likely to support the death penalty when their parish priest strongly opposes it. The sociologists found that parishioners who were devout and active in parish life - providing them more frequent contact with the parish priest - were more likely to oppose the death penalty.

(July 2003)

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