Publication type
Journal Article
Authors
Publication date
June 1, 2012
Summary:
Non-religious people tend to be male rather than female, to be better educated than average, and to live in particular areas. Each of these findings contains a puzzle that we address using data from Great Britain. Male infants are slightly more likely than female infants to be described by their parents as having no religion. To explain this phenomenon, we show that there is an association between the religious labels attached to girls and boys and the characteristics of their mothers and fathers, respectively. A positive correlation between education and non-religion is often taken for granted. Among young adults in Britain, however, the relationship is reversed. The reason lies in the former religious polarisation of the graduate population. The final puzzle is why so much local variation in secularity is evident. We examine the extent to which these contrasts are the result of demographic and socio-economic differences.
Published in
Journal of Contemporary Religion
Volume and page numbers
Volume: 27 , p.29 -48
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13537903.2012.642725
ISSN
13537903
Subject
#520480