Religion is a major social institution in the United States. While the scientific community has experienced a resurgence in the idea that there are important linkages between religion and family life and religion and health outcomes, this area of study is still in its early stages of development, scattered across multiple disciplines, and of uneven quality. To date, no book has featured both reviews of the literature and new empirical findings that define this area for the present and set the agenda for the twenty-first century. Religion, Families, and Health fills this void by bringing together leading social scientists who provide a theoretically rich, methodologically rigorous, and exciting glimpse into a fascinating social institution that continues to be extremely important in the lives of Americans.
Contributions by: Robert A Hummer, John P. Bartkowski, Christopher G Ellison, Lisa Pearce, Duane Alwin, Jacob Felson, Mark Regnerus, Valarie King, Xiaohe Xu, Amy Burdette, Teresa Sullivan, Linda Waite, Alisa Lewin, Lisa Keister, Evelyn Lehrer, JenÆnan Read, Neal Krause, Marc Musick, Meredith Worthen, Maureen Benjamins, Richard Rogers, Patrick M Krueger, Isaac Eberstein, Kathleen Heyman, Tim Heaton, Darren Sherkat, Helen Ebaugh