On Monday, May 20, the Center on Children and Families at the Brookings Institution convened an event to discuss the findings of a new report, “The Ties that Bind: Is Faith a Global Force for Good or Ill in the Family?” from the Institute for Family Studies and the Wheatley Institution. The report explores the relationship between religion and four important outcomes—relationship quality, fertility, domestic violence, and infidelity—in the United States and 10 other countries in the Americas and Europe. It also explores the complicated relationship between religion and feminism when it comes to family life. The event feature two expert panels responding to various issues in the report.
Panel 2: Faith, feminism, and the contemporary family
Agenda
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May 20
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Introduction
Isabel V. Sawhill Senior Fellow Emeritus - Economic Studies, Center for Economic Security and Opportunity @isawhill -
Panel #1: Religion, fertility, relationship quality, and domestic violence: What have we learned?
Laurie DeRose Research Director - World Family Map Project, Professor of Sociology - Georgetown University, Research Assistant Professor - Maryland Population Research CenterSpencer James Associate Professor, Department of Family Life - Brigham Young UniversityConrad Hackett Associate Director of Research - Pew Research CenterChristine Emba Columnist - The Washington Post -
Panel #2: Faith, feminism, and the contemporary family
W. Bradford Wilcox Director - National Marriage Project, University of Virginia, Nonresident Senior Fellow - American Enterprise Institute (AEI) @BradWilcoxIFSIsabel V. Sawhill Senior Fellow Emeritus - Economic Studies, Center for Economic Security and Opportunity @isawhillHanna Rosin Co-host, Invisibilia - NPRJason S. Carroll Professor of Marriage and Family Studies - Brigham Young University
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