Joseph Bulbulia
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      • Religion and coordination among strangers
      • Religious Solidarity Demonstrated
      • The Cooperative Niche
      • Religious Costs As Adaptations
      • Firewalking and Empathy
    • New Zealand Attitudes and Values Survey
    • LEVYNA
    • Evolution, Cognition, Religion>
      • Cultural Evolution of Religion
      • Social Consequences of Rituals
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      • 2012 RELI 106
      • 2012 RELI 328
      • 2012 RELI 401
      • 2012 RELI 489
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      • Victoria University
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The Personal Consequences of Religious Participation: a 20-year National Scale Longitudinal Study

I am working with Chris Sibley (Auckland University), lead investigator of the NZAVS (New Zealand Attitudes and Values Survey) a 20-year longitudinal study which Chris set up, examining how changing values affect health, economic performance, and subjective wellbeing.

We have published one article:
1.           Sibley, C.G. & Bulbulia, J. (2012) Healing Those Who Need Healing: How Religious Practice Interacts with Personality to Affect Social Belonging. Journal for The Cognitive Science of Religion (1)1, 29-45

The following are under review:

2.            Sibley, C.G. and Bulbulia, J. The Proportion of Religious Residents Predicts The Values of Nonreligious Neighbours: Evidence from a National Sample.  Religion, Brain, Behaviour.  

3.            Sibley, C.G. and Bulbulia, J.  Religious identity and value orientations: Disentangling causality. International Journal for The Psychology of Religion.

4.            Sibley, C.G. and Bulbulia, J. Faith After An Earthquake: a longitudinal study of religion and perceived health before and after the 2011 Christchurch New Zealand earthquake. PLOS ONE.

We also have several papers outside the NZAVS project.

5.          Bulbulia, J. Wilson, M.S. and Sibley, C.G. Thin and thinner: hypothesis driven research and the study of humans.

6.           Wilson, M., Sibley, C., and Bulbulia, J. Religions Without Armies and Navies? Latent Class Analysis Distinguishes Five Types of Orientations to the Supernatural.

 






 




 



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