RT Article T1 Religious Identity, Religious Attendance, and Parental Control JF Review of religious research VO 56 IS 4 SP 555 OP 580 A1 Kim, Young-Il A1 Wilcox, W. Bradford LA English PB Springer YR 2014 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1822419751 AB Using a national sample of adolescents aged 10–18 years and their parents (N = 5,117), this article examines whether parental religious identity and religious participation are associated with the ways in which parents control their children. We hypothesize that both religious orthodoxy and weekly religious attendance are related to heightened levels of three elements of parental control: monitoring activities, normative regulations, and network closure. Results indicate that an orthodox religious identity for Catholic and Protestant parents and higher levels of religious attendance for parents as a whole are associated with increases in monitoring activities and normative regulations of American adolescents. K1 Parental Control K1 Parenting K1 Religious Attendance K1 Religious Identity DO 10.1007/s13644-014-0167-0