Friends’ religiosity and first sex

Citation

Adamczyk, A. & Felson, J. (2006). Friends' religiosity and first sex. Social Science Research. vol. 35 (4) pp. 924-947

Abstract

Researchers have established that individual religiosity influences sexual behavior and that religious support can increase consistency between personal religiosity and behavior. Researchers are less certain, however, of the effect that religious friendship networks have on sexual behavior. In addition, the effects of network characteristics such as density and one’s position in a social network have not been established. This paper uses a network subsample of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health) to examine the effect of friends’ religiosity on the probability of first sex. We find that friends’ religiosity has an independent influence on adolescent sexual behavior that is similar in magnitude to personal religiosity. We also find evidence that friends’ religiosity has the strongest influence on the sexual behavior of adolescents who are embedded in dense social networks, in which teens’ friends are also friends with one another. These results support the hypothesis that group influences depend on the degree of embeddedness within the network and highlight the importance of studying religion as a property of groups as well as individuals.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ssresearch.2005.04.003

Keyword(s)

Religion Sexual Behavior

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Social Science Research

Author(s)

Adamczyk, A.
Felson, J.

Year Published

2006

Volume Number

35

Issue Number

4

Pages

924-947

DOI

10.1016/j.ssresearch.2005.04.003

Reference ID

493