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Journal Article

Citation

Eisenberg N, Castellani V, Panerai L, Eggum ND, Cohen AB, Pastorelli C, Caprara GV. J. Pers. 2011; 79(4): 841-873.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/j.1467-6494.2011.00703.x

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Little is known about changes in religious coping and their relations to adolescents' and young adults' functioning. In 686 Italian youths, trajectories of religious coping were identified from age 16-17 years to age 22-23 years; cohorts of youths reported at 3 of the 4 assessments. Four trajectories of religious coping were identified: decreasing, low stable, high stable, and increasing. A decline in religious coping was associated with high levels of externalizing problems at age 16-17, whereas an increase in religious coping was associated with higher externalizing problems at ages 18-19 and 20-21 years and with relatively high involvement with deviant peers. High stable religious copers were high in prosocial behavior at three ages; low stable religious copers were higher than people undergoing change in their religious coping from mid‐adolescence into early adulthood. These results can expand our current thinking about religious coping and adolescent adjustment.

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