This study examines the influence of familism, religion, and their interaction on participation in secular voluntary associations. We develop an insularity theory to explain how familism and religion encourage Americans to avoid secular civic participation. Using data from the first wave of the National Survey of Families and Households, this study finds that familism reduces participation in secular organizations. Moreover, religion moderates the effect of familism: specifically, religious involvement tends to increase the negative effect of familism on secular civic participation. Although religious involvement in and of itself fosters secular civic participation, strong familism tends to dampen positive impacts of religious involvement. ...
Using a subsample of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY97), this study (N = 2,471) prov...
The study examines the relationship between, on the one hand, service attendance, volunteering, and ...
This article examines to what extent religious context influences giving to, and volunteering for, r...
Previous research demonstrates two aspects of religion that affect civic activity—church participati...
This study characterizes social insularity of religiously conservative American married couples by e...
The objective of this thesis was to gauge the predictive effects of family solidarity on religious p...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 131-153).Social scientists have long recognized a positive l...
This dissertation examines the effect of non-affiliation with religion on religiosity and pro-social...
Data collected in a general population survey from a random sample of individuals in two rural commu...
Although families have been fundamentally transformed by divorce and declining fertility rates (Ambe...
Social science has long been interested in the effects and predictors of community participation, es...
Scholars in the field of community psychology have called for a closer examination of the mediating ...
Using a subsample of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY97), this study (N = 2,471) prov...
Although religious giving represents the largest sector of charitable giving in the US, its overall ...
The relationship between religion and volunteering is well documented (Putnam and Campbell, 2010; Ru...
Using a subsample of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY97), this study (N = 2,471) prov...
The study examines the relationship between, on the one hand, service attendance, volunteering, and ...
This article examines to what extent religious context influences giving to, and volunteering for, r...
Previous research demonstrates two aspects of religion that affect civic activity—church participati...
This study characterizes social insularity of religiously conservative American married couples by e...
The objective of this thesis was to gauge the predictive effects of family solidarity on religious p...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 131-153).Social scientists have long recognized a positive l...
This dissertation examines the effect of non-affiliation with religion on religiosity and pro-social...
Data collected in a general population survey from a random sample of individuals in two rural commu...
Although families have been fundamentally transformed by divorce and declining fertility rates (Ambe...
Social science has long been interested in the effects and predictors of community participation, es...
Scholars in the field of community psychology have called for a closer examination of the mediating ...
Using a subsample of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY97), this study (N = 2,471) prov...
Although religious giving represents the largest sector of charitable giving in the US, its overall ...
The relationship between religion and volunteering is well documented (Putnam and Campbell, 2010; Ru...
Using a subsample of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY97), this study (N = 2,471) prov...
The study examines the relationship between, on the one hand, service attendance, volunteering, and ...
This article examines to what extent religious context influences giving to, and volunteering for, r...