Abstract
During the last three decades Dutch church attendance rates dropped considerably, while the relative share of volunteers in non-religious organizations decreased at a slower rate. This is an unexpected development given the positive association between religious involvement and volunteering. In this article, we try to account for this development by addressing the following question: Why has a massive and ongoing decline of church attendance in the Netherlands not resulted in a similar drop in the relative number of volunteers in non-religious voluntary organizations? In view of this question, we wonder if the negative effect of declining church attendance on volunteering is perhaps counterbalanced by a positive effect of educational expansion. Our findings reveal that this is indeed the case, but these counterbalancing effects are only modest.
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Vermeer, P., Scheepers, P., & te Grotenhuis, M. (2016). Churches: Lasting sources of civic engagement? Effects of secularization and educational expansion on non-religious volunteering in the Netherlands, 1988 and 2006. Voluntas, 27(3), 1361–1384. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11266-016-9679-2
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