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Laura Upenieks
Laura Upenieks
Assistant Professor of Sociology, Baylor University
Verified email at baylor.edu
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
Love thy self? How belief in a supportive God shapes self-esteem
S Schieman, A Bierman, L Upenieks, CG Ellison
Review of Religious Research 59 (3), 293-318, 2017
732017
Accumulation of economic hardship and health during the COVID-19 pandemic: Social causation or selection?
A Bierman, L Upenieks, P Glavin, S Schieman
Social Science & Medicine 275, 113774, 2021
612021
Using prosocial behavior to safeguard mental health and foster emotional well-being during the COVID-19 pandemic: A registered report of a randomized trial
A Miles, M Andiappan, L Upenieks, C Orfanidis
PloS one 17 (7), e0272152, 2022
552022
Gender differences in self-esteem, unvarnished self-evaluation, future orientation, self-enhancement and self-derogation in a US national sample
W Magee, L Upenieks
Personality and Individual Differences 149, 66-77, 2019
502019
Do racial differences in coping resources explain the Black–White paradox in mental health? A test of multiple mechanisms
P Louie, L Upenieks, CL Erving, CS Thomas Tobin
Journal of Health and Social Behavior 63 (1), 55-70, 2022
462022
Trust in God and/or Science? Sociodemographic Differences in the Effects of Beliefs in an Engaged God and Mistrust of the COVID-19 Vaccine
L Upenieks, J Ford-Robertson, JE Robertson
Journal of Religion and Health, 1-30, 2022
442022
Changes in religious doubt and physical and mental health in emerging adulthood
L Upenieks
Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 60 (2), 332-361, 2021
412021
Socially distant? Social network confidants, loneliness, and health during the COVID-19 pandemic
A Bierman, L Upenieks, S Schieman
Social Currents 8 (4), 299-313, 2021
342021
Vicarious discrimination, psychosocial resources, and mental health among Black Americans
P Louie, L Upenieks
Social Psychology Quarterly 85 (2), 187-209, 2022
282022
The belief in divine control and the mental health effects of stressful life events: A study of education-based contingencies
L Upenieks, S Schieman
Review of Religious Research 63 (2), 183-215, 2021
282021
Jitters on the eve of the great recession: Is the belief in divine control a protective resource?
L Upenieks, S Schieman, A Bierman
Sociology of Religion 83 (2), 194-221, 2022
272022
Religious attendance and physical health in later life: A life course approach
L Upenieks, MH Schafer
Journal of Health and Social Behavior 61 (4), 486-502, 2020
252020
An expanded model of the moral self: beyond care and justice
A Miles, L Upenieks
Social Science Research 72, 1-19, 2018
242018
Environmental disorder and functional decline among older adults: A layered context approach
MH Schafer, L Upenieks
Social Science & Medicine 124, 152-161, 2015
212015
Religious/spiritual struggles and well-being during the COVID-19 pandemic: Does “talking religion” help or hurt?
L Upenieks
Review of Religious Research 64 (2), 249-278, 2022
182022
Does childhood religiosity delay death?
L Upenieks, MH Schafer, A Mogosanu
Journal of Religion and Health 60 (1), 420-443, 2021
182021
Uncertainty in faith, fear of death? Transitions in religious doubt and death anxiety in later life
L Upenieks
OMEGA-Journal of Death and Dying 87 (3), 814-837, 2023
162023
Beyond “Heartless Conservative” and “Bleeding Heart Liberal” Caricatures: How Religiosity Shapes the Relationship Between Political Orientation and Empathy
S Schieman, A Bierman, L Upenieks
Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 2019
162019
Does disorder get “into the head” and “under the skin”? Layered contexts and bi-directional associations
L Upenieks, MH Schafer, J Iveniuk
Health & Place 39, 131-141, 2016
162016
Marital quality and well-being among older adults: A typology of supportive, aversive, indifferent, and ambivalent marriages
Y Liu, L Upenieks
Research on Aging 43 (9-10), 428-439, 2021
152021
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