RT Article T1 Religion, Race, and Discrimination: A Field Experiment of How American Churches Welcome Newcomers JF Journal for the scientific study of religion VO 54 IS 2 SP 185 OP 204 A1 Wright, Bradley R. Enter A1 Wallace, Michael 1954- A1 Missari, Stacy A1 Zozula, Christine 1983- A2 Wallace, Michael 1954- A2 Wisnesky, Annie Scola A2 Donnelly, Christopher M. A2 Missari, Stacy A2 Zozula, Christine 1983- LA English YR 2015 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1570315485 AB This article reports the results of a nationwide audit study testing how Christian churches welcome potential newcomers to their churches as a function of newcomers' race and ethnicity. We sent email inquiries to 3,120 churches across the United States. The emails were ostensibly from someone moving to the area and looking for a new church to attend. That person's name was randomly varied to convey different racial and ethnic associations. In response to these inquiries, representatives from mainline Protestant churches—who generally embrace liberal, egalitarian attitudes toward race relations—actually demonstrated the most discriminatory behavior. They responded most frequently to emails with white-sounding names, somewhat less frequently to black- or Hispanic-sounding names, and much less to Asian-sounding names. They also sent shorter, less welcoming responses to nonwhite names. In contrast, evangelical Protestant and Catholic churches showed little variation across treatment groups in their responses. These findings underscore the role of homophily, organizational homogeneity, and the costs of racial integration in perpetuating the racial segregation of American religious life. K1 Discrimination K1 Field experiment K1 Race K1 Religion DO 10.1111/jssr.12193