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Dive into the research topics where Melinda Lundquist Denton is active.

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Featured researches published by Melinda Lundquist Denton.


Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion | 2002

Mapping American Adolescent Religious Participation

Christian Smith; Melinda Lundquist Denton; Robert Faris; Mark D. Regnerus

Sociologists know surprisingly little about the religious lives of adolescents in the United States. This article begins to redress that unfortunate lack of knowledge by examining descriptive findings on adolescent religious participation from three recent, reputable national surveys of American youth. We present descriptive statistics on three fundamental aspects of youth religious participation: religious affiliation, religious service attendance, and involvement in church youth groups. We also examine the influences of gender, race, age, and region on these religious outcomes. This descriptive inquiry should help to heighten broader understanding of and to lay down a baseline of essential information about American adolescent religious participation. Further research is needed to investigate the social influence of different kinds of religiosity on various outcomes in the lives of American youth. We know relatively little about the religious lives of American adolescents. The vast majority of research in the sociology of religion in the United States focuses on American adults, ages 18 and older. And few scholars of American adolescents in other fields pay close attention to youth’s religious lives. As a result, our social scientific knowledge of the religious affiliations, practices, beliefs, experiences, and attitudes of American youth is impoverished. 1 This is a problem for many reasons. American adolescents between the ages of 10‐19 represent about 14 percent of all Americans (adolescents ages 10‐24 represent 21 percent), an ageminority population deserving scholarly attention as much as any other group. Indeed, American adolescents may deserve extra scholarly attention by sociologists of religion. Adolescence represents a crucial developmental transition from childhood to adulthood and so can disclose a tremendous amount of knowledge about religious socialization and change in the life course. Adolescents are a population that many religious organizations, both congregations and parachurch ministries, particularly target in order to exert influence in their lives. Adolescence and young adulthood is also the life stage when religious conversion is most likely to take place. Adolescence furthermore provides a unique opportunity to study religious influences on family relationships and dynamics, peer interactions, risk behaviors, and many other outcome variables. Finally, adolescence provides an ideal baseline stage for longitudinal research on religious influences in people’s lives.


Youth & Society | 2016

The Dynamics and Correlates of Religious Service Attendance in Adolescence

Jessica Halliday Hardie; Lisa D. Pearce; Melinda Lundquist Denton

This study examines changes in religious service attendance over time for a contemporary cohort of adolescents moving from middle to late adolescence. We use two waves of a nationally representative panel survey of youth from the National Study of Youth and Religion (NSYR) to examine the dynamics of religious involvement during adolescence. We then follow with an analysis of how demographic characteristics, family background, and life course transitions relate to changes in religious service attendance during adolescence. Our findings suggest that, on average, adolescent religious service attendance declines over time, related to major life course transitions such as becoming employed, leaving home, and initiating sexual activity. Parents’ affiliation and attendance, on the other hand, are protective factors against decreasing attendance.


Archive | 2011

Roots and Ramifications of the Five As of Religiosity

Lisa D. Pearce; Melinda Lundquist Denton

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Archive | 2005

Soul Searching: The Religious and Spiritual Lives of American Teenagers

Christian Smith; Melinda Lundquist Denton


Archive | 2011

A Faith of Their Own: Stability and Change in the Religiosity of America's Adolescents

Lisa D. Pearce; Melinda Lundquist Denton


Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion | 2012

Family Structure, Family Disruption, and Profiles of Adolescent Religiosity

Melinda Lundquist Denton


Sociology of Religion | 2015

Family Disruption and Racial Variation in Adolescent and Emerging Adult Religiosity

Melinda Lundquist Denton; Julian Culver


Archive | 2004

Are American Youth Alienated From Organized Religion

Christian Smith; Robert Faris; Melinda Lundquist Denton


Archive | 2009

Religiosity in the lives of youth

Lisa D. Pearce; Melinda Lundquist Denton


Archive | 2001

Methodological Issues and Challenges in the Study of American Youth and Religion.

Melinda Lundquist Denton; Christian Smith

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Lisa D. Pearce

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Julian Culver

University of Texas at San Antonio

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Robert Faris

University of California

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Jessica Halliday Hardie

University of Missouri–Kansas City

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Mark D. Regnerus

University of Texas at Austin

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