Family Formation and Religious Service Attendance: Untangling Marital and Parental Effects

被引:35
作者
Schleifer, Cyrus [1 ]
Chaves, Mark [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Oklahoma, Sociol, Norman, OK 73019 USA
[2] Duke Univ, Sociol Religious Studies & Divin, Durham, NC USA
关键词
GSS panel; religious participation; family processes; panelmodels; causal models; PARTICIPATION; ORIENTATIONS; TRAJECTORIES; INVOLVEMENT; MEN; AGE;
D O I
10.1177/0049124114526376
中图分类号
O1 [数学]; C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ; 0701 ; 070101 ;
摘要
The positive relationship between family formation and regular weekly religious service attendance is well established, but cross-sectional data make it difficult to be confident that this relationship is causal. Moreover, if the relationship is causal, cross-sectional datamake it difficult to disentangle the effects of three distinct family-formation events: marrying, having a child, and having a child who reaches school age. We use three waves of the new General Social Survey panel data to disentangle these separate potential effects. Using random-, fixed-, and hybrid-effect models, we show that, although in crosssection marriage and children predict attendance across individuals, neither leads to increased attendance when looking at individuals who change over time. Having a child who becomes school aged is the only family-formation event that remains associated with increased attendance among individuals who change over time. This suggests that the relationships between marriage and attending and between having a first child (or, for that matter, having several children) and attending are spurious, causal in the other direction, or indirect (since marrying and having a first child make it more likely that one will eventually have a school-age child). Adding a school-age child in the household is the only family-formation event that directly leads to increased attendance.
引用
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页码:125 / 152
页数:28
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