ABSTRACT

This book presents the findings of the first ever survey of the religious preferences of Members of the European Parliament (MEPs). An international research team interviewed a large sample of MEPs, with the purpose of investigating their beliefs and how these beliefs have an impact on their role as MEPs.

The findings of this survey are offered in order to discuss, in a non-normative way, some key political and intellectual debates. Is Europe secularized? Is the European Union a Christian club? What is the influence of religious lobbying in Brussels? What are the dynamics of value politics? Contributions also compare MEPs with national MPs and citizens to measure whether the findings are specific to the supranational arena and European multi-level governance. External cases, such as the USA and Israel, are also presented to define whether there is a European exceptionalism regarding the role of religion in the political arena.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Religion, State & Society.

chapter 1|21 pages

Introduction

‘Religion at the European Parliament’: purposes, scope and limits of a survey on the religious beliefs of MEPs

part 4|33 pages

So Far, Not So Dissimilar: European ‘Exceptionalism’ Challenged by Other Western Cases

part 5|12 pages

Conclusion

chapter 13|10 pages

Conclusion