Religion as a Determinant of Relationship Stability

There is a burgeoning literature that investigates the effects of religion on relationship dissolution. This study is distinguished from prior scholarship in three broad areas: The investigation estimates the effect of religion on relationship stability using multiple measures of religious affiliati...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal for the scientific study of religion 2024-06, Vol.63 (2), p.281-306
Hauptverfasser: Boulis, Christopher, Torgler, Benno
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container_title Journal for the scientific study of religion
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creator Boulis, Christopher
Torgler, Benno
description There is a burgeoning literature that investigates the effects of religion on relationship dissolution. This study is distinguished from prior scholarship in three broad areas: The investigation estimates the effect of religion on relationship stability using multiple measures of religious affiliation and religious observance; it is based on information of the respondent and their partner for both cohabiting and marital relationships; and it is performed using multiple waves of a large‐scale nationally representative panel data set, the Household Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia Survey. It addresses key limitations, such as: the use of a single measure of religion, a tendency to only use married individual data, and an overreliance on cross‐sectional data. The results indicate that intrafaith couples tend to have a higher degree of relationship stability than other couple types; although, once other factors are controlled for, this effect is no longer statistically significant. We also find religiosity, in particular, religious attendance has a large positive effect on stability in intrafaith couples but can lower stability in interfaith and mixed couples.
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source Sociological Abstracts; Wiley Online Library All Journals
subjects Cohabitation
Couples
Dissolution
Interfaith
interfaith couples
intrafaith couples
Marital relations
Measures
Panel data
relationship stability
Religion
Religiosity
religious affiliations
Religious identity
religious observance
Religious participation
Stability
title Religion as a Determinant of Relationship Stability
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