Preface: Robert M. McElroy, Bishop of San Diego
Chapter 1: Introduction: An Interdisciplinary Analysis of
Non-Affiliation
Jan E. Stets, University of California, Riverside
WHO ARE THEY?
Chapter 2: The Many Meanings of Non-Affiliation
Nancy Ammerman, Boston University
Chapter 3: The Many Meanings of the Secular
Joseph O. Baker, East Tennessee State University
Chapter 4: Lapsed Catholics and Other Religious Non-Affiliates
Carol Ann MacGregor and Ashlyn Haycook, Loyola University New
Orleans
Chapter 5: Affiliates and Non-Affiliates in Later Life
Vern Bengtson, University of Southern California, and Gabrielle
Gonzales, Camille Endacott, and Samantha Copping Kang, University
of California, Santa Barbara
WHERE DO THEY COME FROM?
Chapter 6: Developmental Views on Youth Religious
Non-Affiliation
Sam A. Hardy, Brigham Young University and Gregory S. Longo,
Eastern University
Chapter 7: Religious Non-Affiliation: Expelled by the Right
William V. Trollinger, University of Dayton
Chapter 8: The Transformation of Religion: Drawn by the Left
Matthew S. Hedstrom, University of Virginia
WHAT ARE SOME CONSEQUENCES?
Chapter 9: Non-religiosity, Secularism, and Civil Society
David E. Campbell, University of Notre Dame
Chapter 10: Religious Non-Affiliation and Objections of
Conscience
Bernard G. Prusak, King's College
ADDRESSING THE CHALLENGE
Chapter 11: Reports from Faith Community Leaders in the South
Elizabeth Kirkland Cahill
Chapter 12: Cultivating Faith in Young Adults
Kerry A. Robinson, Leadership Roundtable
Chapter 13: Understanding and Responding to Non-Affiliation
James L. Heft, University of Southern California
Epilogue:
Jan E. Stets, University of California, Riverside and James L.
Heft, University of Southern California
Notes
Index
James L. Heft, S. M., served as professor and chair of the Theology
Department at the University of Dayton for six years, Provost for
eight years, and Chancellor and Professor of Faith and Culture for
10 years, before moving to the University of Southern California in
2006 as the Alton Brooks Professor of Religion and now the Founder
and President Emeritus of the Institute for Advanced Catholic
Studies. He is the author, editor and
co-editor of fourteen books, including Catholicism and
Interreligious Dialogue (OUP 2011) and Catholic High Schools:
Facing the New Realities (OUP 2011).
Jan E. Stets is Professor and Director of the Social Psychology
Research Laboratory at the University of California, Riverside. She
is the former Director of the Sociology Program at the National
Science Foundation, and a former co-editor of Social Psychology
Quarterly.
Prefaced by the Bishop of San Diego, this important
interdisciplinary study co-directed by a theologian (James L. Heft)
and a sociologist (Jan E. Stets) attempts to understand the
phenomenon of religious disaffiliation which, after having affected
European countries, manifests itself today in the United States,
more or less spared on this point until now.
*Jean Louis Ormières, Archives de sciences sociales des
religions*
I highly recommend this book, both for the extensive answers it
provides to its guiding research questions, and for the avenues it
charts for future research.
*James C Cavendish, Sociology of Religion*
This volume is descriptive with a practical aim.
*Rebecca Irwin-Diehl, American Catholic Studies.*
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