Religion News Service
   
Religious diversity is  increasing at the office, and so are pitfalls

 
David Gibson
 
Aug 29, 2013
 
RNS) The American workplace, like the rest of U.S. society, is becoming  
more religiously diverse and that is raising concerns about employer  
accommodations for believers — and increasing the odds for uncomfortable 
moments  
around the water cooler.
 
Yet one potential flashpoint among workers does not involve new immigrant  
faiths but rather two indigenous communities: white evangelicals and  
unaffiliated Americans who constitute one of the fastest-growing segments of 
the  
population. 
A major factor contributing to workplace conflict, according to a survey  
released on Friday (Aug. 30), is that evangelicals — whose religious identity 
is  tied to sharing their beliefs — are much more likely to talk about 
their faith  at work than other religious and nonreligious groups. 
In fact, half of white evangelical Protestants said they share their 
beliefs  with co-workers, compared to 22 percent of workers overall, according 
to 
the _2013 Survey of  American Workers and Religion_ 
(https://www.tanenbaum.org/2013survey) , sponsored by the Tanenbaum Center for  
Interreligious 
Understanding. 
And one-third of evangelicals said they discuss religion frequently, 
compared  to 14 percent of non-Christian believers, 10 percent of Catholics and 
7 
percent  of white mainline Protestants. Moreover, nearly 9-in-10 white 
evangelical  employees say they are somewhat or very comfortable when the issue 
of religion  comes up in the workplace. 
Conversely, the research found that nonbelievers are reticent to discuss  
religion and 43 percent of them say they feel somewhat or very uncomfortable  
when the topic comes up. 
“This suggests the potential for workplace clashes between atheists and  
evangelical Protestants,” the report says. 
The survey, released for Labor Day, was conducted in March and April by the 
 Public Religion Research Institute, which questioned more than 2,000 
American  adults in both English and Spanish. The poll has a margin of error of 
2.8  percentage points. 
Given the findings, it is perhaps not surprising that both nonbelievers and 
 evangelicals shared a heightened sense of bias: Nearly 6-in-10 atheists 
said  they think people look down on their beliefs, and nearly 6-in-10 of 
white  evangelicals agreed that discrimination against Christians has become as 
big a  problem as discrimination against other religious minorities. 
“There’s a clear sense in the data, especially among white evangelicals, 
that  other workers’ needs are being taken care of and theirs are not,” said 
Robert P.  Jones, head of the Public Religion Research Institute. 
Jones added that along with their growing numbers, the “nones” are also  
increasingly confident in proclaiming their lack of religious affiliation, 
which  in turn contributes to the potential for workplace interactions — and 
conflicts  — over religion. 
David Sikkink, a sociologist of religion at the University of Notre Dame 
who  reviewed the report, also noted that while most believers — as well as  
nonbelievers — don’t look to the office as a place to find meaning and 
direction  in their lives, evangelicals often take the opposite view and see 
the 
workplace  as a venue for living out their religious identity. 
“Evangelicals want to be different somehow, to take a stand, and to show 
that  God is working in their lives through them,” Sikkink said.
 
He said that does not always mean sharing the specifics of their faith, but 
 can instead be demonstrated by the way evangelicals deal with workplace  
problems, or simply in their focus on developing friendships with their  
co-workers. Still, the endpoint of such relationships is a conversation about  
faith, “and eventually that may rub the nonreligious the wrong way.” 
Overall, the incidence of workplace conflicts and discrimination over  
religion seems to be a fairly significant issue, according to the survey, with  
one-third of respondents reporting that they have seen or experienced 
incidents  of religious bias in the workplace. 
The most frequently cited problems were not interactions with co-workers 
but  instead related to a failure of companies to provide sufficient 
accommodations  for believers, especially non-Christians. Half of those 
respondents 
said that  their employers are ignoring their religious needs. 
Among the other findings: 
    *   Nearly one-quarter (24 percent) of the respondents reported being 
required  to work on the Sabbath or a religious holiday and 13 percent said 
they  attended company-sponsored events that did not include kosher, halal, 
or  vegetarian options; 
    *   Less than half (44 percent) of workers said their employers had 
flexible  work hours to permit religious observances or prayer and 21 percent 
said their  company had a policy allowing employees to swap holidays to 
accommodate  religious observances; 
    *   Four in 10 workers said their company had materials explaining 
their  policy on religious discrimination, and 14 percent said their employer 
had  programs to teach workers about religious diversity.
On the other hand, while the Tanenbaum report says that American companies  
need to do more to accommodate religious believers, it also found strong  
incentives for businesses to adapt: The survey showed that employees at  
companies that were sensitive to religious needs reported better morale and 
were 
 much less likely to look for another job. 
“With a growing number of nonreligious workers and a growing number of  
workers who are not Jewish or Christian, many employers are just figuring out  
how to navigate these waters,” said Jones.

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