Religion, Religiousness and Fertility in the US and in EuropeReligion, religiosité et fécondité aux Etats-Unis et en Europe

被引:0
作者
Tomas Frejka
Charles F. Westoff
机构
[1] Independent Consultant,
[2] Princeton University,undefined
来源
European Journal of Population / Revue européenne de Démographie | 2008年 / 24卷 / 1期
关键词
Religion; Religiousness; Fertility; Comparative analysis; United States; Europe; Religion; Religiosité; Fécondité; Analyse comparative; Etats-Unis; Europe;
D O I
10.1007/s10680-007-9121-y
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This article aims to assess the role of religion and religiousness in engendering higher US fertility compared to Europe. Religion is important in the life of one-half of US women, whereas not even for one of six Europeans. By every available measure, American women are more religious than European women. Catholic and Protestant women have notably higher fertility than those not belonging to any denomination in the US and across Europe. In all European regions and in the United States as well as among all denominations the more devout have more children. However, women in Northern and Western Europe who are the least religious have equivalent or even higher fertility than women in the US, and notably higher fertility than those in Southern Europe. This suggests that forces other than religion and religiousness are also important in their impact on childbearing. A multivariate analysis demonstrates that relatively “traditional” socio-economic covariates (age, marital status, residence, education, and income) do not substantially change the positive association of religiousness and fertility. Finally, if Europeans were as religious as Americans one might theoretically expect a small fertility increase for Europe as a whole, but considerably more for Western Europe.
引用
收藏
页码:5 / 31
页数:26
相关论文
共 36 条
  • [1] Billings J. S.(1889)Vital statistics of the Jews in the United States Census Bulletin 19 4-9
  • [2] Caldwell J.(2003)Explanations of the fertility crisis in modern societies: A search for commonalities Population Studies 57 241-263
  • [3] Schindlmayr T.(1980)Patterns of American Jewish fertility Demography 17 261-273
  • [4] DellaPergola S.(2004)The ‘curiously high’ fertility of the USA Population Studies 58 88-92
  • [5] Frejka T.(1967)Fertility of the Jews Demography 4 196-209
  • [6] Goldscheider C.(1991)Patterns of contraceptive use in the United States: The importance of religious beliefs Studies in Family Planning 22 102-115
  • [7] Goldscheider C.(2003)The emergence of sub-replacement fertility ideals in Europe Population Research and Policy Review Policy Review 22 479-496
  • [8] Mosher W. D.(2004)Religious decline in Europe? America The National Catholic Weekly 190 16-19
  • [9] Goldstein J. R.(1998)Introduction to the economics of religion Journal of Economic Literature 36 1465-1495
  • [10] Lutz W.(1991)The Consequences of religious market structure: Adam Smith and the economics of religion Rationality and Society 3 156-177