Kl. Brewster et al., THE CHANGING IMPACT OF RELIGION ON THE SEXUAL AND CONTRACEPTIVE BEHAVIOR OF ADOLESCENT WOMEN IN THE UNITED-STATES, Journal of marriage and the family, 60(2), 1998, pp. 493-504
This study addresses the impact of religious affiliation on intercours
e risk and contraceptive use among adolescent women during the 1980s w
hen church-based groups were increasingly involved in debates over rep
roductive and family issues. However, adolescent nonmarital intercours
e and birth rates were rising, suggesting that religious organization,
even as their visibility increased, became less effective at transmit
ting their values. We pooled data from two national surveys conducted
ill 1982 and 1988 and found that affiliation has modest, but stable, e
ffects among Black teens. Among Whites the impact of a fundamentalist
Protestant affiliation increased. Il fundamentalists were less likely
to be sexually active in 1988 than in 1982.