We present two patterns over time in religious giving, secular giving, and religious service attendance. The first pattern describes the prewar cohort (born 1924–1938) as they aged between middle adulthood (ages 35–49) and their senior years (ages 62–76). The second pattern compares the baby boom cohort (born 1951–1965) in middle adulthood to the middle adulthood of the prewar cohort. We present patterns for all families as well as separately for Catholic and Protestant families using data from three sources. The prewar cohort increased their religious giving and attendance as they aged, but—compared to the prewar cohort in middle adulthood—baby boomers give less than expected to religion and attend less. Baby boomer giving is noticeably les...
The transition from adolescence into emerging adulthood is usually accompanied by a decline in relig...
Objective: The aim of the study is to evaluate the relationship between two dimensions of religiosit...
Since religious organizations have long been the single largest type of recipient of American giving...
Religious giving has grown every year in both nominal and inflation-adjusted dollars since it has be...
Using the Oaxaca-Blinder (1994) decomposition method to compare the giving levels of money and time ...
textabstractABSTRACT Previous research has demonstrated that the generally positive relationship bet...
The Center on Philanthropy Panel Study (COPPS) has provided the first data on the giving of parents ...
This paper investigates the research question: How do religious youth learn to give? While it is lik...
Despite the theoretical emphasis on religious decline in modern societies, sociologists remain divid...
Using data from the survey Midlife Development in the United States, 2004-2006, the present study ex...
Despite methodological advances in studying the relationship between religious attendance and volunt...
The positive trend in volunteering among the Dutch young old may in part be due to a relatively favo...
I use repeated, cross-sectional data from 1972 to 2006 to analyze age, period, and cohort effects on...
Comparing two generations at the same point in their life cycles, four decades apart, indicates that...
Researchers in both the United States and Taiwan have devoted attention to charitable giving and the...
The transition from adolescence into emerging adulthood is usually accompanied by a decline in relig...
Objective: The aim of the study is to evaluate the relationship between two dimensions of religiosit...
Since religious organizations have long been the single largest type of recipient of American giving...
Religious giving has grown every year in both nominal and inflation-adjusted dollars since it has be...
Using the Oaxaca-Blinder (1994) decomposition method to compare the giving levels of money and time ...
textabstractABSTRACT Previous research has demonstrated that the generally positive relationship bet...
The Center on Philanthropy Panel Study (COPPS) has provided the first data on the giving of parents ...
This paper investigates the research question: How do religious youth learn to give? While it is lik...
Despite the theoretical emphasis on religious decline in modern societies, sociologists remain divid...
Using data from the survey Midlife Development in the United States, 2004-2006, the present study ex...
Despite methodological advances in studying the relationship between religious attendance and volunt...
The positive trend in volunteering among the Dutch young old may in part be due to a relatively favo...
I use repeated, cross-sectional data from 1972 to 2006 to analyze age, period, and cohort effects on...
Comparing two generations at the same point in their life cycles, four decades apart, indicates that...
Researchers in both the United States and Taiwan have devoted attention to charitable giving and the...
The transition from adolescence into emerging adulthood is usually accompanied by a decline in relig...
Objective: The aim of the study is to evaluate the relationship between two dimensions of religiosit...
Since religious organizations have long been the single largest type of recipient of American giving...