Portuguese Youth Religiosity in Comparative Perspective
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Framework
3. Method
- H1: Analyses of religiosity variables, dimension indexes, and religiosity index by age group in the last round in Portugal. Portugal was compared with Catholic Europe in terms of dimension and religiosity indexes in the last round21.
- H2: Analyses of religiosity variables, dimension indexes, and religiosity index by round in youth in Portugal. Portugal was compared with Catholic Europe in terms of dimension and religiosity indexes of youth22.
- Percentages of aggregated categories consider the total sample, including the missing categories (‘don’t know’, ‘no answer’, etc.), to show their real weight in the total, not only in the valid cases.
- Indexes were created using ‘Transform>Count values within cases’ where only each variable’s values (categories) equal to 1 were considered. Internal consistency of the indexes had been already verified with CA.
- ANOVA was used for variables and indexes. It can only be applied rigorously when two conditions are met: normality, verified by the Kolmogorov–Smirnov test with the Lillefors correction or by the Shapiro–Wilk test (n < 30), and homogeneity of variances, verified by Levene’s test (Maroco 2010, pp. 133–36). When homogeneity of variances does not exist, Fw of Welch can be used (Maroco 2010, p. 160). When normality or both conditions are violated, Kruskal–Wallis’ test can be used, although for samples larger than 30, normality is accepted according to the central limit theorem (Maroco 2010, pp. 59, 227). Significant differences were verified through post-hoc tests23.
- Weights were applied following EVS instructions: weight for Portugal’s variables and equilibrated weight for Europe’s variables. This last weight means that all countries are considered equal, regardless of their original sample sizes and country populations.
4. Results
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | In 1974, the employment in the three sectors had practically the same weight (primary-34.9%, secondary-33.7%, and tertiary-31.4%) while in 2021 the percentages were 2.7%, 24.6%, and 72.7%, respectively. Source: Pordata (accessed on 24 November 2022). |
2 | Gross domestic product (GDP) per capita at constant prices more than doubled between 1974 and 2021: from €8.611 to €19.030. Source: Pordata (accessed on 24 November 2022). |
3 | The actual schooling rate went from 8.3% (pre-school), 84.9% (1st cycle), 26.0% (2nd cycle), 17.8% (3rd cycle), and 4.9% (upper-secondary) in 1974, to 90.4%, 97.4%, 89.0%, 91.9%, and 85.1%, respectively, in 2021. The number of students enrolled in higher education increased from 81.582 to 433.217 between 1978 and 2022 (0.83% and 4.19% of total population, respectively; data for total population: 1978 corresponds to 1981, 2020 corresponds to 2021). Source: Pordata (accessed on 24 November 2022)/INE (https://tabulador.ine.pt/indicador/?id=0011609). |
4 | Although it is important to consider the context where the study was produced—USA—marked by a peculiar religious field. |
5 | |
6 | To simplify, from now on the 12 countries in this study will be named as Catholic Europe. |
7 | Link: https://hdr.undp.org/data-center/country-insights#/ranks (accessed on 17 January 2023). |
8 | Link: https://hdr.undp.org/data-center/documentation-and-downloads (accessed on 24 November 2022). |
9 | Data from 1960/2021. Crude marriage rate (‰): 7.8/2.8. Live births outside marriage (%): 9.5/60.0. Crude divorce rate (‰): 0.1/1.7. Crude birth rate (‰): 24.1/7.7. Mean age on first marriage: M—26.9/34.3, W—24.8/32.9. Mean age of the mother at birth of first child: 25.0/30.9. Source: Pordata (accessed on 25 November 2022). |
10 | Except Croatia, Lithuania, Poland, and Slovakia, in the other countries the ratio priest/inhabitant is decreasing in the last decades, looking at the values between 1981 (the first round of EVS) (Croatia and Slovenia since 1991, Czech Republic and Slovakia since 1993) and 2019 (SSRGE 1983, pp. 98–99; 1993, p. 99; 1995, p. 99; 2021, pp. 107–8). |
11 | To simplify, the eventual exceptionality of beliefs is not addressed here and in the second hypothesis but only in discussion. |
12 | This problem was confirmed by email by a member of EVS in March 2022. |
13 | Data were collected in 1999 in all Catholic European countries, including Portugal. |
14 | Data were collected in 2008 in Portugal and in 2008–2009 in the other Catholic European countries. |
15 | Data were collected in 2020 in Portugal and in 2017–2019 in the other Catholic European countries. |
16 | Justification of Suicide/Having casual sex/Prostitution (Q44/v157/v158/v160), associated also with life and sexuality, as the other four norm variables, were not included because the differences between rounds are quite irrelevant in youth (first two) or there are no values in 1999 (last) in Portugal. |
17 | Unacceptable < 0.5; poor > 0.5; questionable > 0.6; acceptable > 0.7; good > 0.8; excellent > 0.9 (George and Mallery 2003, p. 231). |
18 | Q4 Please look carefully at the following list of voluntary organisations and say which, if any, do you belong to? v9 Religious or church organisations. |
19 | https://www.eurofound.europa.eu/topic/retirement (accessed on 7 December 2022). |
20 | https://www.britannica.com/science/middle-age (accessed on 7 December 2022). |
21 | Austria, Croatia, Czech Republic, France, Hungary, Italy, Lithuania, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain. Belgium, Ireland, Luxembourg, and Malta were not included since there are no data in the most recent round (2017). |
22 | In this analysis only the countries with data in 2017 were included, therefore Belgium, Ireland, Luxembourg, and Malta were excluded. Plus, there are no data for Slovenia in prayer in 1999 and for Italy in justification of homosexuality in 2008. |
23 | There is no consensus on the most appropriate test, but LSD, Bonferroni, Scheffe, and Tukey are pointed out when variances are equal (in fourteen tests available in SPSS) (Maroco 2010, p. 161). When variances are not equal, four tests are available in SPSS so all may be used to match the number of the previous tests. |
24 | Since Coutinho (2019) and Vezzoni and Biolcati-Rinaldi (2015) used only two age groups, it is not possible to compare. |
25 | 18–34/35–64/+64 (% in 2020): God (6.0/3.5/2.3), Life after death (10.4/18.3/21.4), Hell (8.0/15.2/20.4), Heaven (10.9/15.3/19.4). |
26 | 15–34: 2.59a; 35–64: 3.08b; +64: 3.16b (scale 0–4); significant differences between (a) and (b). Fw (2) = 54.846, p < 0.001. |
27 | Link: https://www.missaopais.pt/ (accessed on 17 January 2023). |
28 | Portugal/Catholic Europe: 2000—0.791/0.805; 2020—0.863/0.882; Growth (%)—9.1/9.7. Source: https://hdr.undp.org/data-center/documentation-and-downloads (accessed on 22 December 2022). |
29 |
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Variables per dimension | Categories |
---|---|
Community | |
Q1/v6 Importance of religion in life | Very important + Quite important |
Q13 Belonging to a religious denomination | Yes |
Q17 Self-identification as religious | A religious person |
Q38/v115 Confidence in the church | A great deal + Quite a lot |
Practice | |
Q15 Frequency of religious services attendance | More than once a week + Once a week |
Q22 Frequency of prayer | Every day + More than once a week + Once a week |
Belief | |
Q18/v57 Belief in God | Yes |
Q18/v58 Belief in Life after death | Yes |
Q18/v59 Belief in Hell | Yes |
Q18/v60 Belief in Heaven | Yes |
Q20 Beliefs about God | There is a personal God |
Q21 Importance of God in life | From 6 to 10 (very important) (scale 1-10) |
Norm | |
Q44/v153 Justification of Homosexuality | From 1 (never justifiable) to 5 (scale 1-10) |
Q44/v154 Justification of Abortion | From 1 (never justifiable) to 5 (scale 1-10) |
Q44/v155 Justification of Divorce | From 1 (never justifiable) to 5 (scale 1-10) |
Q44/v156 Justification of Euthanasia | From 1 (never justifiable) to 5 (scale 1-10) |
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Coutinho, J.P. Portuguese Youth Religiosity in Comparative Perspective. Religions 2023, 14, 147. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14020147
Coutinho JP. Portuguese Youth Religiosity in Comparative Perspective. Religions. 2023; 14(2):147. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14020147
Chicago/Turabian StyleCoutinho, José Pereira. 2023. "Portuguese Youth Religiosity in Comparative Perspective" Religions 14, no. 2: 147. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14020147
APA StyleCoutinho, J. P. (2023). Portuguese Youth Religiosity in Comparative Perspective. Religions, 14(2), 147. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14020147