<resource xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4" xsi:schemaLocation="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4 http://schema.datacite.org/meta/kernel-4.1/metadata.xsd"><identifier identifierType="DOI">10.7910/DVN/BEQRZC</identifier><creators><creator><creatorName nameType="Personal">Schmidt, Eric</creatorName><givenName>Eric</givenName><familyName>Schmidt</familyName><affiliation>Indiana University</affiliation></creator></creators><titles><title>Replication Data for: "The Influence of Religious-Political Sophistication on U.S. Public Opinion"</title></titles><publisher>Harvard Dataverse</publisher><publicationYear>2017</publicationYear><subjects><subject>Social Sciences</subject><subject>Religion and politics; American politics; public opinion; sophistication; Evangelical Protestants; Roman Catholics</subject></subjects><contributors><contributor contributorType="ContactPerson"><contributorName nameType="Personal">Schmidt, Eric</contributorName><givenName>Eric</givenName><familyName>Schmidt</familyName><affiliation>Indiana University</affiliation></contributor></contributors><dates><date dateType="Submitted">2017-01-30</date><date dateType="Updated">2017-01-31</date></dates><resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Dataset"/><sizes><size>16482</size><size>16457</size><size>16580</size><size>16555</size><size>74997</size><size>33706</size></sizes><formats><format>type/x-r-syntax</format><format>type/x-r-syntax</format><format>type/x-r-syntax</format><format>type/x-r-syntax</format><format>text/tab-separated-values</format><format>type/x-r-syntax</format></formats><version>1.0</version><rightsList><rights rightsURI="info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess"/><rights rightsURI="http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0">CC0 1.0</rights></rightsList><descriptions><description descriptionType="Abstract">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. </description><description descriptionType="Other">Dataset and code for reproducing (in R) all tables and figures in the published article. Please contact errschmi@indiana.edu for any questions/clarifications. </description></descriptions><geoLocations/></resource>