• Skip to main content
  • Skip to main navigation
Baylor University Baylor University
Institute for Studies of Religion
  • About ISR
    • Distinguished Professors
    • Professors
    • Post-Docs
    • Staff
    • Contact Us
  • Scholars
  • Programs + Research
    • Evangelical Studies Program
      • Conference 2026
      • Evangelical Studies Program Fellows
    • Faith and Flourishing: Parchman Prison
    • Global Flourishing Study
    • Program on Prosocial Behavior
      • American Charter of Freedom of Religion and Conscience
      • Assessing the Long-Term Effectiveness of Seminaries in Maximum Security Prisons
      • Character Virtues and College Students: A Pilot Study
      • Merit Beyond the Badges: Eagle Scouts in Later Life
      • Prosocial Youth Behavior
      • Relevant Studies on Prosocial Corrections
    • Program on Historical Studies of Religion
    • Program on Religion and Population Health (PRPH)
  • ISR Publications
    • Case Studies
    • Interdisciplinary Journal of Research on Religion (IJRR)
    • Special Research Reports
    • Reports
    • Religion Watch
  • ISR News
Baylor BU Institute for Studies of Religion Programs + Research Program on Prosocial Behavior Prosocial Youth Behavior
  • Evangelical Studies Program
  • Faith and Flourishing: Parchman Prison
  • Global Flourishing Study
  • Program on Prosocial Behavior
    • American Charter of Freedom of Religion and Conscience
    • Assessing the Long-Term Effectiveness of Seminaries in Maximum Security Prisons
    • Character Virtues and College Students: A Pilot Study
    • Merit Beyond the Badges: Eagle Scouts in Later Life
    • Prosocial Youth Behavior
    • Relevant Studies on Prosocial Corrections
  • Program on Historical Studies of Religion
  • Program on Religion and Population Health (PRPH)

Prosocial Youth Behavior

Baylor University’s Institute for Studies of Religion (ISR) and the Program on Prosocial Behavior received a $400,000 grant from the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP) to establish a research initiative that examines the role religion plays in prosocial youth behavior. The grant began in the fall of 2006 and concluded in April of 2009.

Participating in the initiative were Dr. Rodney Stark, University Professor of the Social Sciences and co-director of ISR; Dr. Byron Johnson, professor of sociology and co-director of ISR as well as director of the Program on Prosocial Behavior; Dr. Christopher Bader, assistant professor of sociology, ISR fellow and co-principal investigator; Dr. Sung Joon Jang, associate professor of sociology at Louisiana State University and non-resident fellow at ISR; and Dr. Scott Desmond, assistant professor of sociology at Purdue University and non-resident fellow at ISR.

“For decades scholars have identified factors that predict antisocial behavior, especially crime. But surely it is at least as important to understand why kids turn into good citizens as to understand why they go bad,” Stark said. “Hardly any attention has been given to this side of the equation. What factors support positive, prosocial behavior? There is much more involved here than merely obeying the law. Why do people do admirable things? For example, why do they support charities, do volunteer work, return lost valuables or participate in civic activities? Of course, we already know some of the answers to these questions, but now we can really dig in.”

The federal grant from the OJJDP was a multidisciplinary initiative devoted specifically to understanding the role of religiousness, religiosity, religious institutions and congregations, as well as religious practices and beliefs, in promoting prosocial behavior among youth. The Program on Prosocial Behavior  produced and encouraged ground-breaking quantitative and qualitative studies of the antecedents, correlates and factors associated with prosocial behavior.

“Put simply, there is a need for research that intentionally focuses our understanding on positive and prosocial outcomes,” Johnson said. “In essence, the field of crime and delinquency studies is badly skewed to the negative and in need of a major overhaul. What better place to initiate the shift in that mindset than here at Baylor?

Over the course of this two-year project on the Role of Religion Prosocial Religion and Youth Behavior, we have produced a number of important products and have achieved our aims as outlined in our original proposal to OJJDP.  To follow we summarize these products and developments that have helped to significantly advance our knowledge of the role of religion in preventing delinquency as well as to more broadly advance the field of crime and delinquency studies regarding the place of religion not only as an important protective factor, but a key contributor to prosocial youth behavior.

  • We have utilized some of the most important and respected datasets (e.g., National Survey of Children, National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, National Education Longitudinal Study) to produce new and cutting-edge scholarship at the intersection of religion and delinquency, crime, and substance abuse.
  •  Our studies have identified and operationalized religious variables in different ways that may ultimately help both faith-based as well as secular programs attain critical competencies so that they can be effective partners in the prevention and/or amelioration of juvenile delinquency and youth violence in their communities.
  •  We have developed empirically informed scholarship that sheds new light on youth crime desistance.
  •  By drawing upon and testing the viability of religion measures within a number of different theoretical perspectives, we have taken an important step that will allow to consider more of an integrated approach to youth crime prevention that includes the role of religion and faith-based organizations in promoting prosocial behavior.
  • We have published several journal articles in peer-reviewed journals. Each of these ground-breaking articles make important connections to the role of religion in prosocial youth behavior. (Please see box to the right)
  •  We are now completing a major meta-analysis that systematically and objectively reviews in a comprehensive the religion-delinquency literature between 1944 and 2008.  W The meta-analysis will describe the state-of-the art and will be the foundational reference for any future research on this subject.
  •  We hosted a conference in San Antonio, this last October, where we presented findings of our OJJDP sponsored research.  We have made several presentations at other conferences including the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences and the American Society of Criminology.
  • We also highlighted preliminary findings of our OJJDP at a conference co-sponsored by Child Trends and the Heritage Foundation in Washington, DC in October of 2007.

Institute for Studies of Religion

Pat Neff Hall
4th Floor

One Bear Place #97236
Waco, TX 76798

isr@baylor.edu
(254) 710-7555
Baylor BU Institute for Studies of Religion Programs + Research Program on Prosocial Behavior Prosocial Youth Behavior
  • About ISR
    Back
    • Distinguished Professors
    • Professors
    • Post-Docs
    • Staff
    • Contact Us
  • Scholars
  • Programs + Research
    Back
    • Evangelical Studies Program
      Back
      • Conference 2026
      • Evangelical Studies Program Fellows
    • Faith and Flourishing: Parchman Prison
    • Global Flourishing Study
    • Program on Prosocial Behavior
      Back
      • American Charter of Freedom of Religion and Conscience
      • Assessing the Long-Term Effectiveness of Seminaries in Maximum Security Prisons
      • Character Virtues and College Students: A Pilot Study
      • Merit Beyond the Badges: Eagle Scouts in Later Life
      • Prosocial Youth Behavior
      • Relevant Studies on Prosocial Corrections
    • Program on Historical Studies of Religion
    • Program on Religion and Population Health (PRPH)
  • ISR Publications
    Back
    • Case Studies
    • Interdisciplinary Journal of Research on Religion (IJRR)
    • Special Research Reports
    • Reports
    • Religion Watch
  • ISR News
  • General Information
  • Academics & Research
  • Administration
  • Admissions
  • Gateways for ...
  • About Baylor
  • Athletics
  • Ask Baylor
  • Bookstore
  • Calendar
  • Campus Map
  • Directory
  • Give to Baylor
  • News
  • Search
  • Social Media
  • Strategic Plan
  • College of Arts & Sciences
  • Diana R. Garland School of Social Work
  • George W. Truett Theological Seminary
  • Graduate School
  • Hankamer School of Business
  • Honors College
  • Law School
  • Louise Herrington School of Nursing
  • Moody School of Education
  • Research at Baylor University
  • Robbins College of Health and Human Sciences
  • School of Engineering & Computer Science
  • School of Music
  • University Libraries, Museums, and the Press
  • More Academics
  • Athletics
  • Compliance, Risk and Safety
  • Human Resources
  • Marketing and Communications
  • Office of General Counsel
  • Office of the President
  • Office of the Provost
  • Operations, Finance & Administration
  • Senior Administration
  • Student Life
  • University Advancement
  • Undergraduate Admissions
  • goBAYLOR
  • Graduate Admissions
  • Baylor Law School Admissions
  • Social Work Graduate Programs
  • George W. Truett Theological Seminary Admissions
  • Online Graduate Professional Education
  • Virtual Tour
  • Visit Campus
  • Alumni & Friends
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Online Graduate Professional Education
  • Parents
  • Prospective Faculty & Staff
  • Prospective Students
  • Students
  • Anonymous Reporting
  • Annual Fire Safety and Security Notice
  • Cost of Attendance
  • Digital Privacy
  • Legal Disclosures
  • Mental Health Resources
  • Notice of Non-Discrimination
  • Report It
  • Title IX
  • Web Accessibility
 
Baylor University
Copyright © Baylor® University. All rights reserved.
Baylor University • Waco, Texas 76798 • 1-800-229-5678