| Sign In to gain access to subscriptions and/or personal tools. |
He Sends Rain Upon the WickedA Panel Study of the Influence of Religiosity on Violent VictimizationRochester Institute of Technology
Bowling Green State University
Montana State University This research investigates low religiosity as a predictor of violent victimization. The theoretical framework the authors present here posits that religiosity should help structure daily activities in such a way as to (a) limit exposure to offenders by encouraging contact with peers who are less deviant, (b) lessen one's target suitability by inhibiting grievance-causing delinquent activity, and (c) enhance guardianship by fostering stronger bonds with parents and school. Thus, although researchers expect religion to be a bivariate predictor of violent victimization, its influence should be indirect. The authors investigate these claims using two waves from the public-use version of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health). The results indicate that religiosity is a correlate of violent victimization. Consistent with these theoretical claims, the effect of religiosity is not direct, but instead occurs indirectly primarily through its influence on self-reported delinquency and peer deviance.
Key Words: victimization religiosity routine activities
Journal of Interpersonal Violence, Vol. 22, No. 7,
872-893 (2007) |
|||