<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?><metadata xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:dcterms="http://purl.org/dc/terms/" xmlns="http://dublincore.org/documents/dcmi-terms/"><dcterms:title>Replication Data for: "The Influence of Religious-Political Sophistication on U.S. Public Opinion"</dcterms:title><dcterms:identifier>https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/BEQRZC</dcterms:identifier><dcterms:creator>Schmidt, Eric</dcterms:creator><dcterms:publisher>Harvard Dataverse</dcterms:publisher><dcterms:issued>2017-01-31</dcterms:issued><dcterms:modified>2017-01-31T20:33:15Z</dcterms:modified><dcterms:description>Scholarly accounts of elite-mass communication often suggest that political sophistication is a necessary condition for adopting the attitudes of partisan elites. Some have also suggested that political knowledge promotes religious-political issue constraint among religious identifiers. This paper contributes to the political sophistication literature by piloting and testing a new measure, religious-political sophistication (RPS), assessing knowledge of church teaching on particular political issues. Using original measures launched on the 2014 Cooperative Congressional Election Study, I show that for evangelical Protestants and Roman Catholics, RPS (in conjunction with frequent church attendance) depresses support for abortion rights and same-sex marriage. Moreover, I argue that assessing RPS this way is not fatally contaminated by unsophisticated respondents interpolating that their clergy must share their political positions. Results suggest religion-and-politics scholars should adopt RPS measures to gain a greater understanding of the unique sources of political communication upon which religious identifiers draw. </dcterms:description><dcterms:subject>Social Sciences</dcterms:subject><dcterms:subject>Religion and politics; American politics; public opinion; sophistication; Evangelical Protestants; Roman Catholics</dcterms:subject><dcterms:date>2017-01-31</dcterms:date><dcterms:contributor>Schmidt, Eric</dcterms:contributor><dcterms:dateSubmitted>2017-01-30</dcterms:dateSubmitted><dcterms:license>CC0 1.0</dcterms:license></metadata>