Philip Jenkins is Distinguished Professor of History at Baylor University.
In 'Fertility and Faith', Philip Jenkins lays out a compelling,
data-driven, and cogently argued case for the intertwining nature
of reproductive rates and the fervency of religious beliefs around
the world. Overall, Jenkins shows that higher fertility rates
generally correspond to high levels of religious commitment in a
society while, conversely, lower fertility rates correlate with
lower religous commitment. Rather than stipulate a simplistic cause
and effect relationship considering this correlation, the author
ably demonstrates that there is in fact a complex web of linkages
and cyclical sociological reinforcements.--Michael Nichols, Perdue
University "Anglican Theological Review/Episocpal History"
Fertility and Faith is a work of remarkable scholarship, amounting
to a global overview of both the demographic transition and the
decline in religious involvement.... Jenkins gives historians and
social scientists plenty to ponder, providing both a remarkable
panorama of the woods and an assiduous examination of the trees,
displaying the fruits of years of research in a book that is
completely accessible to a general audience. It deserves to be
widely read.--David Voas "Journal of Church and State"
Jenkins makes a clear argument and supports it well with impressive
demographic breadth and fascinating historical depth. His
contribution is highly relevant and could be crucial to a
multidisciplinary hermeneutic for approaching fluctuations in
fertility rates--such that policy makers, theologians, students,
and scholars of world religion might engage critically with [Total
Fertility Rate] trends and projections worldwide.--Lisa Joy Fowler
"Reading Religion"
An important contribution to the conversation about religion's
changing role in society, and one that those interested in
demography or contemporary religious life would do well to engage
with.--Alexandra Greenwald "Christian Century"
... An important contribution to the conversation about religion's
changing role in society, and one that those interested in
demography or contemporary religious life would do well to engage
with.--Alexandra Greenwald "Christian Century"
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