Year: 1989 Source: American Sociological Review, v.54, (April 1989), p.288-295 SIEC No: 20021146

This article questions several sociological theories which imply that religion deters individual deviance, by using a unified ecological data set that includes measures of suicide, crime, homosexuality, and cultism. Substantial negative associations between rates of church membership and rates of crime and cultism survive statistical controls, while the negative associations with suicide and homosexuality do not. The results suggest a challenge to simple theories about the role of religion in society. (33 refs)