Faith-Based Organizations and Legislative Advocacy: A Qualitative Inquiry
Date
2008-08-08
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
M. Lori Thomas
Abstract
A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of
Doctor of Philosophy at Virginia Commonwealth University.
Virginia Commonwealth University, 2008
Major Director: F. Ellen Netting, Professor, School of Social Work
Since the early 1990s, religion and matters of faith and spirituality have become
a focal point in numerous arenas beyond the individual and traditionally sacred. With
President George W. Bush’s White House Office of Faith-Based and Community
Initiatives of 2001, the Charitable Choice provision of the Personal Responsibility and
Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act that preceded it in 1996, and the myriad of legal
challenges that followed, matters of religion have become paramount in political
discourse regarding social welfare. The viability of faith-based social service provision
and the organizations providing the direct services have been the focus of speculation,
debate, and a growing amount of research. Few studies, however, have explored the role
of faith-based advocacy or lobbying organizations in shifting the social welfare climate,
in proposing or opposing policy changes in the social welfare system, or in defining
social welfare. Little is empirically known about the organizational dynamics of
religious advocacy groups whose attempts at structural influence are, in part, affected
by theological positions and religiously-informed values.