Why are Women More Religious than Men? Do Risk Preferences and Genetic Risk Predispositions Explain the Gender Gap? |
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Authors: | YI LI ROBERT WOODBERRY HEXUAN LIU GUANG GUO |
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Institution: | 1. Department of Sociology, University of Macau;2. Institute for the Study of Religion, Baylor University;3. School of Criminal Justice, University of Cincinnati;4. Department of Sociology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill |
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Abstract: | Risk preference theory argues that the gender gap in religiosity is caused by greater female risk aversion. Although widely debated, risk preference theory has been inadequately tested. Our study tests the theory directly with phenotypic and genetic risk preferences in three dimensions—general, impulsive, and sensation-seeking risk. Moreover, we examine whether the effects of different dimensions of risk preferences on the gender gap vary across different dimensions of religiosity. We find that general and impulsive risk preferences do not explain gender differences in religiosity, whereas sensation-seeking risk preference makes the gender gap in self-assessed religiousness and church attendance insignificant, but not belief in God, prayer, or importance of religion. Genetic risk preferences do not remove any of the gender gaps in religiosity, suggesting that the causal order is not from risk preference to religiosity. Evidence suggests that risk preferences are not a strong predictor for gender differences in religiosity. |
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Keywords: | religiosity risk preferences genetic risk preferences gender |
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