Tag Archives | Loose Coupling

The Sequential Rise of Female Religious Leadership

Jeremy Senn, Jörg Stolz

Sociological Science March 20, 2025
10.15195/v12.a9


In his seminal work “Ordaining Women,” Mark Chaves (1997b) highlighted the phenomenon of “loose coupling” regarding female religious leadership: congregations often display inconsistencies between their stated policies and actual practices. Some congregations declare openness to female leadership but do not practice it, whereas others officially forbid female leadership yet have women in leadership roles. Our article identifies a theoretical mechanism producing this inconsistency. We propose that congregations typically first loosen their formal rules governing female access to leadership and only later allow women to occupy leadership positions in practice. This two-stage process results in a temporal lag between rule change and practice change, creating the observed “loose coupling,” where rules are often more gender egalitarian than practice. Using two waves of the National Congregation Survey Switzerland covering all religious traditions, we test our theory both on the aggregate and the unit level and find strong support for it. Simulations further indicate that certain characteristics of the organizational population of congregations, such as their low attrition rate, may explain a large part of the lag between rule change and practice change.
Creative Commons LicenseThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Jeremy Senn: Institut de Sciences Sociales des Religions (ISSR), University of Lausanne (UNIL)
E-mail: jeremy.senn@unil.ch

Jörg Stolz: Institut de Sciences Sociales des Religions (ISSR), University of Lausanne (UNIL)
E-mail: joerg.stolz@unil.ch

Acknowledgements: We thank Jean-Philippe Antonietti for statistical advice and the editors as well as an anonymous reviewer for very helpful comments on how to reframe the article.

Supplemental Materials

Reproducibility Package: A replication package with instructions, data, and R-code has been made publicly available on the Open Science Framework (OSF): https://osf.io/qhb5d/

  • Citation: Senn, Jeremy, Jörg Stolz. 2025. “The Sequential Rise of Female Religious Leadership” Sociological Science 12: 180-201.
  • Received: September 19, 2024
  • Accepted: January 24, 2025
  • Editors: Arnout van de Rijt, Stephen Vaisey
  • DOI: 10.15195/v12.a9

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