Religious influences on sensitive self-reported behaviors: The product of social desirability, deceit, or embarrassment?

Citation

Regnerus, M. D. & Uecker, J. (2007). Religious influences on sensitive self-reported behaviors: The product of social desirability, deceit, or embarrassment?. Sociology of Religion. vol. 68 (2) pp. 145-163

Abstract

Religion appears to exert influence on numerous types of adolescent attitudes and actions. However, some researchers remain skeptical, attributing religious effects to selection processes, social desirability bias in survey responses, or a combination of the two. In this study we evaluate the evidence about social desirability and candidness explanations for apparent religious influences, and analyze data from a nationally representative dataset of American adolescents. Results suggest that while social desirability and embarrassment modestly diminish the likelihood of self-reporting some sensitive behaviors, they are neither associated with religiosity nor do they undermine apparent religious effects. We conclude that religious youth are not systematically at risk of providing unintentionally invalid or intentionally inaccurate self-reports of behaviors that are of a sensitive nature.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/socrel/68.2.145

Keyword(s)

Religion

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Sociology of Religion

Author(s)

Regnerus, M. D.
Uecker, J.

Year Published

2007

Volume Number

68

Issue Number

2

Pages

145-163

ISSN/ISBN

1069-4404

DOI

10.1093/socrel/68.2.145

Reference ID

653