Open Research will be unavailable from 8am to 8.30am on Monday 28th July 2025 due to scheduled maintenance. This maintenance is to provide bug fixes and performance improvements. During this time, you may experience a short outage and be unable to use Open Research.
 

Religion and attitudes concerning euthanasia: Australia in the 1990s

Date

Authors

Sikora, Joanna

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Sage Publications Inc

Abstract

What was the influence of religious identity, beliefs and practices on attitudes to euthanasia in Australia during the 1990s? To address this question I analyse data from national representative surveys and find that denomination, church attendance and beliefs in personal God all made a difference to attitudes to voluntary and non-voluntary euthanasia in unique ways. Moreover, the acceptance of a scientific outlook, comprising elements of Darwinism and modern cosmology, enhanced support for the right to 'easy death' amongst the non-religious. Formal education did not directly polarize attitudes to this issue, but it raised the likelihood of accepting a scientific cosmology. A scientific outlook, in turn, strengthened the belief that, in some circumstances, the deliberate taking of life should be allowed. But even as levels of education increased and both church attendance and the intensity of religious beliefs declined, Australian churchgoers and worshippers maintained their fervent opposition to euthanasia.

Description

Citation

Source

Journal of Sociology

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31