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Over half of college students across the nation are concerned with the
moral direction of the U.S., and only 33 percent approve of the job
President Bush is doing—down from 41 percent last fall—according to
poll results released by the Institute of Politics (IOP) yesterday.
The semiannual survey that polls different aspects of college
students’ political attitudes found that students deem religion and
morality to be a key part of their lives. Seventy percent of students
surveyed said that religion is “important” or “very important” to them,
and significant percentages characterized many leading political issues
today as “question[s] of morality.”
But 60 percent of students said that they “somewhat disagree”
or “strongly disagree” that religious values should play a more
important role in government.
THE POLITICS OF GOD
“What we’re finding is that this is an incredibly religious
generation,” said Caitlin W. Monahan ’06, who co-chaired the group
conducting the survey. “But at the same time they’re saying that a
separation of church and state is necessary.”
The poll surveyed 1,200 college students selected at random
from a national database of 5.1 million college students and has a
margin of error of plus or minus 2.8.
Amanda L. Shapiro ’08, president of the Harvard Secular Society, said she approved of this apparent trend.
“Increased secularism with increased morality is not
paradoxical in any way,” she said. “Morality does not have to be a
matter of religiosity.”
Jacob L. Bryant ’07, a Harvard-Radcliffe Christian Fellowship
executive team member, said he did not find it surprising that students
considered high-profile policy issues to be questions of morality.
“I was surprised that more people didn’t see those as moral
issues,” he said. “To some extent every issue is a moral issue, and to
say it’s not is dangerous.”
But President of the Harvard Republican Club Stephen E. Dewey
’07 commented that “the fact that people consider two different issues
to be ‘moral issues’ does not imply that they think about those
different issues in the same way.”
“Public policy is often debated in the language of rights and
justice, so it is not surprising that people attribute a moral
character to political issues,” he wrote in an e-mail.
The survey also found that students’ party affiliations
strongly influenced their views on the influence of religion on
American life.
A majority of college Republicans replied that the influence
of religion was decreasing, seven out of eight of whom said that this
was a “bad thing.” Over half of college Democrats, in direct contrast,
said religious influence was increasing, two thirds of whom answered
that this trend was negative.
THE ‘WE’ GENERATION
IOP Director Jeanne Shaheen noted “the extent to which college
students see the world internationally and support a multilateral
approach” as one of the most interesting results of the survey.
“They tend to be more liberal and democratic than the
generation before them,” she said. “Unlike the generation X, the ‘me’
generation, this is the ‘we’ generation. It’s very encouraging,
although of course we don’t know how many of these attitudes they will
carry into their later lives.”
Last spring, IOP members were surprised when a survey found
that 74 percent of students thought the U. N. “should take the lead in
solving international crises and conflicts,” said survey co-chair
Krister B. Anderson ’07. Based on those results, this year’s survey
group inquired deeper into student attitudes towards multilateralism
and foreign policy.
A majority of students, the survey found, said they had faith
in the U.N. “because of its role in the world and not because they
don’t trust the U.S.,” according to Anderson.
“This generation grew up in the context of 9/11 and the Iraq
war. These are two formative events, and I think we’re going to see a
generation that’s more multilateral in terms of foreign affairs.”
Shaheen said that politicians ought to pay more attention to
this younger generation, citing the 47 percent voting rate of 18- to
24-year-olds in the last election, “the biggest increase over the 2000
election of any demographic in the electorate.”
“College students are very engaged and now with things like facebook and myspace, they are very reachable,” she said.
NEW ALLIANCES
The researchers concluded from the poll results that
“traditional party identification labels of ‘conservative’ and
‘liberal’ are antiquated, and don’t fully represent students.” Instead,
the conductors of the study argue that a new typology combining
religious-secular identifications with conservative-liberal ones is
more effective.
Dewey said he disagreed with the IOP’s proposed model.
“Obviously the concept of a left-right gradient doesn’t fully
reflect the complexity of politics in this country,” he said. “But I am
not convinced that religion is the second gradient that can best
complement it. I have always been more convinced by the combination of
left-right and statist-libertarian gradients.”
“I think what you’ll need to see is the parties adapting to
the new issues people find salient,” said Eric P. Lesser ’07, president
of the Harvard College Democrats. “There is a hesitance from people to
see a specific religion invoked but a desire for policies to be
grounded in broader moral values.”
—Staff writer Alexandra C. Bell can be reached at acbell@fas.harvard.edu.
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