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  1. Christian democracy has drawn mainly from Catholic social teaching and neo-scholasticism, as well as the Neo-Calvinist tradition within Christianity; it later gained ground with Lutherans and Pentecostals, among other denominational traditions of Christianity in various parts of the world.

  2. 1. What is Christian demoCraCy? Christian democracy is a political movement that originated in europe – specifically in the countries of belgium, germany, france, italy, the netherlands, austria, and switzerland – during the mid-19th cen-tury. organisationally, the movement was rooted mainly in the cultural and charitable Catholic associa-

    • 6/8/2011 10:07:49 AM
  3. 22. März 2024 · Christian democracy, political movement that has a close association with Roman Catholicism and its philosophy of social and economic justice. It incorporates both traditional church and family values and progressive values such as social welfare. For this reason, Christian democracy does not fit.

  4. 4. Juni 2021 · Catholic Christian Democrats framed the unification of Europe as a relatively exclusionary cultural-civilizational endeavour, while Protestant Christian Democrats favoured a more inclusive conception of Europe that prioritised free trade over cultural homogeneity.

    • Josef Hien, Fabio Wolkenstein, Fabio Wolkenstein
    • 2021
  5. 6. Juli 2020 · Since 1945, the most widespread and arguably most influential political party in the world has been the Christian Democrats (CDs). The party has governed separately or as part of coalitions in Germany, Italy, France, Ireland, and many important Latin American nations and is credited with transitioning Europe to democracy ...

    • Vincent Stine
    • 2020
  6. Our thesis is that in the past decade European Third Way social democracy did not ‘Christian democratise’, but, on the contrary, has tried to ‘social democratise’ the continental, Christian democratic welfare state regime (Green-Pedersen et al, 2001).

  7. In much of the literature, strength of social democracy is used as an indicator of the mobilization of working-class power (e.g., Korpi 1983). An alternate indicator is strength of the labor movement, conceptualized as the density, political unity, and centralization of union organization.