Nancy
T. Ammerman
Professor of Sociology of Religion
Ph.D. Yale University
Dr. Ammerman's
Publications
Dr. Nancy Ammerman has spent much of the last decade studying
American congregations. Her most recent book, Pillars
of Faith: American Congregations and their Partners (University
of California Press, 2005), describes the common patterns
that shape the work of American's diverse communities of
faith. Her 1997 book,
Congregation and Community, tells
the stories of twenty-three congregations that encountered
various forms of neighborhood
change in communities around the country. Along with a team
of others, she edited and contributed to Studying
Congregations: A New Handbook, published in 1998 by
Abingdon. Prior to her work on congregations, she wrote extensively
on conservative
religious movements, including Bible
Believers: Fundamentalists in the Modern World, a
study of an independent Baptist church in New England, and Baptist
Battles: Social Change and Religious Conflict in the Southern
Baptist
Convention, which received
the 1992 Distinguished Book award from the Society for the
Scientific Study of Religion. Nancy has also been active
in attempting to educate a larger public audience about American
religion. In 1993, she served on the panel of experts convened
by the U. S. Departments of Justice and Treasury to make
recommendations in light of the government's confrontation
with the Branch Davidians at Waco. In 1995, she testified
before the Senate Judiciary Committee on the same subject,
and in 1997 she lectured in Israel under sponsorship of the
U. S. State Department. Nancy earned the Ph.D. degree from
Yale University.
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