Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) S. Offutt , Sanja Ignjatović
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) Asbury Theological Seminary
ANO 2023
TIPO Book
CITAÇÕES 2
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 7C28EF3694C41C484A91CEC50EFD7F48
MD5 070aba4281a37e693159a9e2b001f699

Resumo

ow are the two most ubiquitous community-based organizations in poor Salvadoran neighborhoods—gangs and evangelical churches—connected? Most studies concur with the Brenneman/Wolseth thesis, which states that evangelical churches uniquely provide people with a pathway out of gangs. This article argues that such dynamics are a relatively small subset of a broad range of interactions between evangelicals and gangs. Data from the Religion, Global Poverty, and International Development study, collected in a mid-sized Salvadoran city from 2014 to 2018, show that: (1) family networks link evangelicals and gangs; (2) evangelicals and gangs share community governance; (3) gangs infiltrate congregations; and (4) evangelical ideas and networks penetrate gang life. These findings indicate that the widely accepted 'haven' perspective of evangelicals in Latin America is insufficient to explain current empirical complexities. An 'entanglement' framework is thus introduced, which may be relevant to evangelicals' relationships to contemporary Latin American society more broadly.

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