4.3 Article

Christian universities as moral communities: Drinking, sex, and drug use among university students in the United States

Journal

SOCIAL SCIENCE JOURNAL
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/03623319.2021.1963108

Keywords

Religion; deviance; college students

Funding

  1. E.A. Franklin Charitable Trust

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The study found that studying at a Christian school has the strongest negative association with deviant behavior, while religiosity is relatively less important, and Christian fundamentalist beliefs have a weak correlation with deviant behavior. The results support the concept of Moral Communities that strongly discourage deviant behavior among respondents in an explicitly religious academic environment.
We examine the effects of religious educational context, Christian fundamentalist beliefs and religiosity on alcohol use, sexual activity, and illegal drug use. Respondents are 3610 university students at six public state schools and six private schools, three of which are affiliated with conservative Christian denominations. Data were gathered from 2010-2013 and done via face-to-face distribution and collection of response. Religious context - enrollment and study at a Christian school - has the strongest negative association with deviant behavior. Religiosity is less important, and Christian fundamentalist beliefs are very weakly associated. Results support the idea of Moral Communities in which place, practices and beliefs strongly discourage deviant behavior among respondents in an explicitly religious academic environment.

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