Americans identified less and less with organized religion over the past two decades. Yet apparently, many people who no longer identify with a religion are not consistently nonreligious. Reinterviews reveal that many people who express no religious preference in one survey name a religion when asked the same question in a subsequent interview. Past research called this phenomenon a “liminal” status. This article improves estimates of liminality by using three interviews and a better statistical model. About 20 percent of Americans were liminal in recent years, 10 percent were consistently nonreligious, and 70 percent were consistently religious. Falling religious identification in cross-sectional data over the last three decades reflects s...
Rates of religious non-affiliation continue to rise in the United States, with roughly 20% of Americ...
This thesis is based on the rise of the so-called “nones” in America - those who do not identify as ...
This paper examines three dimensions of American religion--belonging, behavior and belief--by creati...
Americans identified less and less with organized religion over the past two decades. Yet apparently...
This study examines the stability of religious preference among people who claim no religious prefer...
Since 1990, the percentage of Americans with no religious affiliation has grown substantially. Prior...
The proportion of Americans who reported no religious preference doubled from 7 percent to 14 percen...
This paper attempts to explain the occurrence of people claiming no religious identity ("nones&...
Twenty percent of American adults claimed no religious preference in 2012, compared to 7 percent twe...
In spite of the fact that more than 10 percent of Americans claim no religion, academic investigatio...
Period and cohort effects on reports of no religious preference and religious disaffiliation are est...
A recent Pew study found that there has been an increase in the number of Americans who claim to hav...
Although there has been a fast rise in the share of Americans reporting no religion, it is unclear w...
Religiosity in the United States remains a strong social force. The United States persistently demon...
Is the American public becoming less religious? Yes, at least by some key measures of what it means ...
Rates of religious non-affiliation continue to rise in the United States, with roughly 20% of Americ...
This thesis is based on the rise of the so-called “nones” in America - those who do not identify as ...
This paper examines three dimensions of American religion--belonging, behavior and belief--by creati...
Americans identified less and less with organized religion over the past two decades. Yet apparently...
This study examines the stability of religious preference among people who claim no religious prefer...
Since 1990, the percentage of Americans with no religious affiliation has grown substantially. Prior...
The proportion of Americans who reported no religious preference doubled from 7 percent to 14 percen...
This paper attempts to explain the occurrence of people claiming no religious identity ("nones&...
Twenty percent of American adults claimed no religious preference in 2012, compared to 7 percent twe...
In spite of the fact that more than 10 percent of Americans claim no religion, academic investigatio...
Period and cohort effects on reports of no religious preference and religious disaffiliation are est...
A recent Pew study found that there has been an increase in the number of Americans who claim to hav...
Although there has been a fast rise in the share of Americans reporting no religion, it is unclear w...
Religiosity in the United States remains a strong social force. The United States persistently demon...
Is the American public becoming less religious? Yes, at least by some key measures of what it means ...
Rates of religious non-affiliation continue to rise in the United States, with roughly 20% of Americ...
This thesis is based on the rise of the so-called “nones” in America - those who do not identify as ...
This paper examines three dimensions of American religion--belonging, behavior and belief--by creati...