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Religions as brands? Religion and spirituality in consumer society

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This article gives an interdisciplinary account of the societal causes as well as individual and organizational effects of religious consumer society. It integrates and systematizes contributions from economics of religion, marketing, and sociology of religion. The article presents the causes of religious consumer society and the most frequent individual adaptations (quality expectations, religious shopping, syncretism) and organizational responses (marketing and branding strategies). Findings are that (1) in the religious consumer society, individuals are free not to be religious or spiritual, putting religious associations in competition with secular organizations, and possibly leading to secularization, (2) it is exaggerated to speak of shopping and consuming as the “new religions” of Western societies, and (3) religious marketing and branding face important limitations, some internal and some external to religious and spiritual organizations, due to the dilemma between marketing practices and transcendental claims. We suggest ways and means to solve this dilemma.

Keywords: Secularization; branding; marketing; religiosity; transcendence

Document Type: Research Article

Affiliations: 1: Faculty of Theology and Science of Religions, University of Lausanne, Lausanne-Dorigny, Switzerland 2: Faculty of Business and Economics (HEC), University of Lausanne, Lausanne-Dorigny, Switzerland

Publication date: 01 January 2019

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  • The Journal of Management, Spirituality & Religion (JMSR) now in its twenty first year, is the leading journal in this subfield of scholarship, housing the largest collection of academic work relevant to the disciplines of business, management and organization, religious studies and practical theology as well as the social sciences more generally. A truly interdisciplinary bridge journal, JMSR is highly ranked, listed in four categories byScopus at the 98th percentile (Scopus 2023); third out of 334 journals by Clarivate (Clarivate 2023, Journal Citation Indicator) and at 0.884 impact by Cabells (out of a maximum of 1.00). JMSR will continue to serve these communities and related scholarly domains as the prime forum for disseminating empirical data, developing theory, reporting best practice, and for the exchange of ideas and debate.
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