Religion is a fundamental cultural factor profoundly influential on human mental health and behavioural choices, and, in addition, family is the most proximal and intimate socialization agent contributive to youth development. Religion, Family, and Chinese Youth Development explores how religious involvement of Chinese parents affects their psychological health and family socialization, which leads to various aspects of the development of Chinese youths.Specifically, a structural relationship between religion, family socialization, and youth development was constructed theoretically and tested empirically in the Chinese context, which can portray the linked lives of religious involvement of Chinese parents, parental psychological health, family processes, parenting practices, the development of psychosocial maturity, and the internalizing and externalizing outcomes of Chinese youths. Undeniably, the findings of this book provide insightful social and policy implications for researchers and human service practitioners related to Chinese societies. By clearly depicting and empirically testing the connections between religion, family, and Chinese youth development, the book can be a reference for clergy, family practitioners, researchers, policy makers, management of NGOs, and graduate students of social sciences.
Jerf W. K. Yeung holds a PhD from The Hong Kong Polytechnic University. His research focuses on family and children, religion and health, and youth development, which has recently appeared in Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly, Social Indicators Research, and Marriage & Family Review.
1. Religion and Empirical Research in Contemporary China2. Religion and Psychological Health of Chinese Parents3. Religion and Family Socialization: A Christian Perspective4. Chinese Youth Development in the Family Context: Psychosocial Maturity5. Chinese Youth Development in the Family Context: Psychological and Behavioral Outcomes6. Linked Life: Religion, Family Socialization, and Youth development7. Conclusion, Application, and Future Directions
"...this volume is of interest to those interested in Chinese Christianity, religion in the family sphere, and religion and psychology."- Joseph Chadwin, University of Vienna
Susanne Scholz, Caroline Vander Stichele, USA) Scholz, Susanne (Perkins School of Theology, Southern Methodist University, the Netherlands) Vander Stichele, Caroline (Tilburg University