Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Religiosity and Marital Stability Among Black American and White American Couples*

156

Citations

34

References

2008

Year

Abstract

Abstract: We examine the effects of subjective and organizational religious participation on marital stability over time for urban Black American couples and White American couples who participated in a longitudinal project. Our findings indicated that the role religiosity plays in the stability of marriage over time varied by gender and race. Black husbands and wives reported that religion was more important to them and that they attended religious services more frequently than White husbands and wives. Greater service attendance was predictive of decreased odds of divorce, only when reported by wives. Interaction effects revealed that the effect was more notable among White wives. Practitioners should consider the diversity between and within couples and the sociohistorical contexts in which marriages are embedded.

References

YearCitations

1916

3.4K

1998

2.6K

1996

2K

1991

1.5K

1999

688

2001

523

1972

473

1997

456

2003

377

1988

375

Page 1