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American Attitudes about Gay Marriage: The Impact of Attitudes toward Familial Gender Roles and Religiosity

The purpose of this study was to examine attitudes about gay marriage. The main research question was: Do traditional attitudes toward familial gender roles and conservative, moderate, and liberal views about religiosity impact attitudes about gay marriage? I used data from the 2006 General Social Survey (GSS) of 1,977 adults living in the United States.
Results of this study found people with traditional attitudes toward familial gender roles have more negative attitudes about gay marriage. Also, people with strong religious affiliation and more frequent attendance at religious services have more negative attitudes about gay marriage. Furthermore, people who were very religious and belonged to specific religious affiliations have more negative attitudes about gay marriage. Conversely, this study found people who were slightly religious, not religious, and very spiritual have more positive attitudes about gay marriage and people who belonged to specific religious affiliations have more positive attitudes about gay marriage. / Dr. Melissa Swauger
Dr. Diane Shinberg
Dr. Kay Snyder

  1. http://hdl.handle.net/2069/458
Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:IUP_Thesis/oai:dspace.lib.iup.edu:2069/458
Date13 September 2011
CreatorsCraig, Dorothy A.
Source SetsIndiana University of Pennsylvania Thesis
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
Format938759 bytes, application/pdf

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