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Ellison, Christopher G.; Burdette, Amy M.; Glenn, Norval D. – Journal of Family Issues, 2011
This study explores the relationship between multiple aspects of religious involvement--affiliation, church attendance, subjective religiosity--and marital expectations among college women. In addition, the authors investigate whether religious involvement mediates the link between family background and marital expectations. These issues are…
Descriptors: Females, Family Characteristics, Marriage, Religious Factors
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Ellison, Christopher G.; Musick, Marc A.; Holden, George W. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2011
Using longitudinal data from a sample of 456 focal children in the National Survey of Families and Households (NSFH), this study examined two research questions: (a) Does corporal punishment of young children (ages 2-4 at baseline) predict increases in levels of externalizing and internalizing problems over a 5-year study period? (b) Does the…
Descriptors: Protestants, Punishment, Correlation, Longitudinal Studies
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Webb, Amy Pieper; Ellison, Christopher G.; McFarland, Michael J.; Lee, Jerry W.; Morton, Kelly; Walters, James – Family Relations, 2010
A long tradition of research demonstrates that divorce is a risk factor for depressive symptoms. Although a growing literature examines links between religious factors and marital quality and stability, researchers have neglected the role of religion in successful or problematic coping following divorce. Building on Pargament's seminal work on…
Descriptors: Divorce, Marital Satisfaction, Religion, Risk
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Ellison, Christopher G.; Bradshaw, Matt – Journal of Family Issues, 2009
The use of corporal punishment to discipline children remains a perennial focus of controversy. Several studies published in the 1990s linked support for, and use of, corporal punishment with religious factors, particularly core doctrines of conservative (i.e., evangelical and fundamentalist) Protestantism. This study reexamines the relationships…
Descriptors: Discipline, Ideology, Punishment, Religious Factors
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Ellison, Christopher G.; And Others – Social Forces, 1996
Data from the 1987-88 National Survey of Families and Households indicate that parents with conservative scriptural beliefs used corporal punishment to discipline their children more frequently than did parents with less conservative theological views. This link persisted when numerous parent, child, and household characteristics were controlled.…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Child Rearing, Conservatism, Corporal Punishment