Talking about sex: Religion and patterns of parent-child communication about sex and contraception

Citation

Regnerus, Mark D. (2005). Talking about sex: Religion and patterns of parent-child communication about sex and contraception. Sociological Quarterly. vol. 46 (1) pp. 79-105

Abstract

Despite the association between religiousness and conservative sexual attitudes, links between religion and patterns of parent–child communication about sex and birth control are largely undocumented. This study examines these relationships using two nationally representative data sets of parents and adolescents. I evaluated a conceptual model of religious influence on the sexual socialization of adolescents. Results suggest that parental public religiosity curbs the frequency of conversations about sex and birth control, and after accounting for conversations about sexual morality, so does parental religious salience. Despite notable relationships with religious affiliation, age, race, and gender still shape parental communication patterns most consistently.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1533-8525.2005.00005.x

Keyword(s)

Religion

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Sociological Quarterly

Author(s)

Regnerus, Mark D.

Year Published

2005

Volume Number

46

Issue Number

1

Pages

79-105

DOI

10.1111/j.1533-8525.2005.00005.x

Reference ID

367