Religiosity and Connection to Others Protect Against Service RecessionWho Engages?August 27, 2009
![]() Strong connections to others and to the community protect against a decrease in civic engagement during an economic recession.24 In our whole sample, 72% said they had cut down on their civic engagement; but among frequent participants in religious services, a significant portion (40%) had increased the amount of time they put into volunteering and other civic activities. They responded quite differently from those who attend services less often, only about 20% of whom increased civic engagement by any extent. Regular religious attendees were also more likely to feel their communities responded to the current economic situations by helping each other more. Attendance at religious services appears to provide some protection against declines in civic engagement during tough economic times. Other indicators of social capital (visiting with friends often, eating together as a family, and belonging to a club) predicted higher levels of engagement after controlling for religious service attendance and demographic factors. We found that regardless of education, age, ethnicity, marital status, or income level, people who are well-connected to their family and friends are far more likely to have increased civic engagement this year. Continue Reading If you like this kind of content, sign up for an NCoC.net account and we'll customize your homepage recommendations based on your interests..
|
PACE Webinar: "Building Playgrounds to Build Communities: How a 'Quick Win' Develops Long-lasting Community Capacity" http://t.co/8q6AJF3Q
About 17 hours ago
reply
Thanks for the RT @earthforce. Cool visual representation of your mission! http://t.co/eOX1tVBz
About 18 hours ago
reply
Thanks for the shout out @SocialCitizen! Check out their #NextGen #change orgs resources page http://t.co/FjtgMzuC
About 18 hours ago
reply
The real issue is mobility - that anyone who plays by the rules and works hard should have access to the #AmericanDream http://t.co/vZja15kS
About 21 hours ago
reply
Recently Popular Tags
Baby Boomers
Business
Charitable Donations
Citizenship
Civic Engagement
Civic Health
Civic Learning
Deliberative Democracy
eCitizenship
Economy
Education
Elections
Expressing Political Views
Family & Friends
Gender
Generations
GenX
Government
Military
Millennials
Participating in Politics
Philanthropy
Policy
Political Involvement
Politics
Public Policy
Race
Religion
Service
Service-Learning
Social Entrepreneurship
Staying Informed
Trust
Understanding Politics & Government
Volunteering
Voting
|
||
| 202-729-8038 | conference@ncoc.net 1875 K Street, NW • 5th Floor • Washington, DC 20006 Copyright © 2000-2012 The National Conference on Citizenship. All Rights Reserved Privacy Policy | Glossary of Terms |
Follow Us on: |
||