Department of Sociology, University of Vienna, and the Vienna Institute of Demography of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, Wittgenstein Centre for Demography and Global Human Capital.
Popul Stud (Camb). 2012 Jul;66(2):197-212. doi: 10.1080/00324728.2012.655304. Epub 2012 Feb 21.
While researchers have often found that Europeans who report faith-based beliefs or practices have larger families than those who do not, there is a lack of evidence on the reasons for these links. This study investigated whether having a first child affects parents' level of church attendance and whether the frequency of church attendance at different times in life predicts a person's (almost) completed fertility. Drawing on five waves of a large-scale Dutch panel survey, the study used data that cover a substantial part of the respondents' reproductive period (1987-2005). In contrast to findings from the USA, the results suggest a one-way influence: having a first child does not predict a change in church attendance, but church attendance is a strong predictor of future childbearing.
虽然研究人员经常发现,报告基于信仰的信仰或实践的欧洲人比那些不报告的人有更大的家庭,但对于这些联系的原因缺乏证据。本研究调查了有第一个孩子是否会影响父母参加教堂的程度,以及一生中不同时期参加教堂的频率是否可以预测一个人的(几乎)完成生育能力。该研究利用一项大型荷兰面板调查的五波数据,这些数据涵盖了受访者生育期的大部分(1987-2005 年)。与美国的研究结果相反,研究结果表明存在单向影响:有第一个孩子不会预测参加教堂的变化,但参加教堂是未来生育的一个强有力的预测因素。