Church Affiliation and Life Course Transitions in The Netherlands, 1850-1970

The Netherlands, with dozens of different religious denominations, offer a fine laboratory to study religious differentials in demographic behavior. In this article, I analyze a large historical database with more than 30.000 reconstructed life courses, to answer the question whether statistically s...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Historical social research
Main Author: Kok, Jan (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: GESIS [2017]
In: Historical social research
Further subjects:B Fruchtbarkeit
B Founding a family
B Population development
B Migration
B Historische Entwicklung
B 20. Jahrhundert
B Religiosity
B Socioeconomic Factors
B Religious Affiliation
B Netherlands
B Reproductive behavior
B family formation
B Fertility
B reproductive behavior
B life career
B Marriage
B Child
B Course of life
B Family planning
B Religious factors
B 19. Jahrhundert
B Mortality
B Family Planning
B Sozioökonomische Faktoren
B population development
B Religiöse Faktoren
B Family size
B Twentieth Century
B Nineteenth Century
B Religionszugehörigkeit
B Historical Development
B Religiousness
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Description
Summary:The Netherlands, with dozens of different religious denominations, offer a fine laboratory to study religious differentials in demographic behavior. In this article, I analyze a large historical database with more than 30.000 reconstructed life courses, to answer the question whether statistically significant and consistent behavioral differences across life course domains existed between members of different churches. For each domain - marriage, co-residence, fertility and mortality - the question will be whether the specific ideology of the denominations accounts for the differences or whether the social milieu or life style of the members of these denomination are more important, even after controlling for socio-economic status. By charting demographic differentials across the life course, it becomes possible to detect whether different churches had specific "life scripts" or ideal scenarios according to which their members should live their lives.
ISSN:2366-6846
Contains:Enthalten in: Historical social research
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.12759/hsr.42.2017.2.59-91