NEW paper first evaluates the impact of a two-decade-long Islamization policy 
carried out by a pro-Islamist party, which came to power in 2002 in Turkey, on 
the attitudes of Turkish people toward religious values, religious practices, 
and clergy.
 In this regard, how the importance of religion, frequency of going to mosques, 
and trust in the clergy have changed among Turkish Muslims between 2002 and 
2018 were examined by using World Values Survey data and employing logistic 
regression analysis. 
Estimation results indicated a reduction in belief in God, attendance to 
mosques, and trust in clergy, which imply the failure of the Islamization 
policy. Second, we explored what caused the failure by using the same data set 
and methodology. Our estimations suggested that the symbiotic relationship 
between the pro-Islamist government and religious clergy and institutions may 
explain the failure. As the government is identified with religion in the eye 
of the public, dissatisfaction with the government turned to dissatisfaction 
with religious values.
https://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2022/03/did-turkish-islamization-make-people-more-religious.html#comments

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