Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) Kassandra K Roeser , O.P. Hastings , Katie Barclay , Elaine Chalus , Deborah Simonton
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) Stanford University, Department of Sociology, Colorado State University
ANO 2020
TIPO Book
PERIÓDICO Social Forces
ISSN 0037-7732
E-ISSN 1534-7605
EDITORA Routledge (United Kingdom)
DOI 10.1093/sf/soaa018
CITAÇÕES 7
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 C56C30C0938B956B0B11B95D3AFFCB9A
MD5 AB53F01EEC4BB5E5D807877953368E3E
MD5 895B901DA06781EE254E150F19CCF9B1
MD5 0B2390FD5A6E87DF64C75092503BFAB3
MD5 8C7D72E956C25372DD115C6F5FE3B90C
MD5 53ed7eeee3a6b9e4d40a1e4813dc75d2

Resumo

Two well-known findings are that the religious are happier than the non-religious, and people are less happy when they lose their job. We investigate a link between these by asking whether religion buffers against the negative effect of unemployment on happiness. Although theorized or implicitly assumed in many studies, empirical demonstrations of a causal, moderating effect of religion have been infrequent and often not strong methodologically. We conduct individual-level fixed effects models to test for the buffering effect in the US context using recent panel data from the 2006–2014 General Social Surveys. Religious service attendance, belief in life after death, and trying to carry one's religious beliefs over into other dealings in life all substantially buffered the effect of unemployment on happiness. Praying daily, believing God exists, identifying as a religious person, and having a religious affiliation did not. We discuss these results in the context of prior work and existing theory. To further support a causal interpretation of these findings, we also conduct a secondary analysis showing that unemployment does not appear to increase or decrease religiousness. This paper makes an important sociological contribution to the growing field of happiness research and to our understanding of how religion matters to people during hard times.

Ferramentas