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First published online January 17, 2024

Long-term Impacts of Civic Engagement during Emerging Adulthood: A Nationally-representative Study

Abstract

Purpose

We examined if civic engagement during emerging adulthood positively impacted a broad array of outcomes in middle adulthood, and if associations varied based on race, gender, age, and urban-rural status.

Design

Prospective design used to determine if civic engagement during emerging adulthood (M age = 21.81) predicted outcomes 15 years later.

Setting

Restricted data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health.

Subjects

Wave 1 participants who completed surveys 7 years (77% follow-up rate), 14 years (80% follow-up rate), and 22 years later (follow-up rate 72%) and who had valid sampling weight to ensure national representativeness (n = 9349).

Measures

Predictor - civic engagement; Outcomes-mental health, substance use, criminal behaviors, and healthy behavior.

Analysis

Linear regression using MPLUS 7.2.

Results

Civic engagement predicted lower levels of depressive symptoms (b = −1.05, SE = .28), criminal behaviors (b = −.47, SE = .12), and substance use (b = −.66, SE = .13), and higher levels of healthy behaviors (b = 1.26, SE = .19), after controlling for demographics, family, peer, neighborhood, and school-related background variables. Moderation analyses revealed that civic engagement benefited females and white participants more.

Conclusion

Civic engagement during emerging adulthood has a positive impact on a broad array of outcomes in middle adulthood. Implications and future research recommendations will be discussed.

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References

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Published In

Article first published online: January 17, 2024
Issue published: June 2024

Keywords

  1. civic engagement
  2. emerging adulthood
  3. prospective study
  4. volunteering

Rights and permissions

© The Author(s) 2024.
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PubMed: 38233344

Authors

Affiliations

Martie P. Thompson, PhD
Department of Public Health and Exercise Science, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC, USA
Matthew Hudson-Flege, PhD
Institute for Health and Human Services, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC, USA
Kayla Hancock, BS
Department of Public Health and Exercise Science, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC, USA

Notes

Martie P. Thompson, Department of Public Health and Exercise Science, Appalachian State University, Public Health Program, 1179 State Farm Rd, PO Box 32071, Boone, NC 28608-0001, USA. Email: [email protected]

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