Beata Zarzycka

Parental attachment styles, religiousness, and deconversion processes in adolescence

Artykuł naukowy w czasopiśmie recenzowany

Czasopismo: Mental Health Religion & Culture (ISSN: 1367-4676)
Współautorzy: Michał Grupa, Dariusz Krok, Agata Rynasiewicz
Rok wydania: 2024
Tom: 27
Numer czasopisma: 1
Strony od-do: 87-100
Streszczenie: Previous studies have demonstrated links between parental attachment styles and increased religiousness or conversion. However, few studies have focused on how parental attachment may influence departure from religion. This study examined the relationships between parental attachment characteristics and adolescent deconversion. The moderating role of parental religiousness was also examined. Participants were 536 high school students aged between 14 and 18 (M = 16.31, SD = 1.22). The results showed that anxious and avoidant attachment styles were positively related to deconversion, whereas secure attachment was negatively related to deconversion. These relationships were moderated by parental religiousness. In those who have highly religious parents, the secure attachment was negatively related, whereas anxious and avoidant attachment was positively related to deconversion. Our findings confirm that parental attachment characteristics and religiousness are essential for understanding the process of religious deconversion in adolescents.
Dostęp WWW: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13674676.2024.2304302
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/13674676.2024.2304302



Cytowanie w formacie Bibtex:
@article{1,
author = "Beata Zarzycka and Michał Grupa and Dariusz Krok and Agata Rynasiewicz",
title = "Parental attachment styles, religiousness, and deconversion processes in adolescence",
journal = "Mental Health Religion & Culture",
year = "2024",
number = "1",
pages = "87-100"
}

Cytowanie w formacie APA:
Zarzycka, B. and Michał Grupa and Dariusz Krok and Agata Rynasiewicz(2024). Parental attachment styles, religiousness, and deconversion processes in adolescence. Mental Health Religion & Culture, 1, 87-100.