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Religious ties shape how Black Americans define family, Pew study finds

(RNS) — Black Christians are more likely than religiously unaffiliated to consider nonrelatives a part of their families. 
Religious ties shape how Black Americans define family, Pew study finds
(Photo by Tony Meyers/Pexels/Creative Commons)

(RNS) — Black Americans are more likely to consider people not related to them by blood or marriage part of their families, according to a new study from the Pew Research Center. Religious affiliation, Pew found, is a key factor in forming these alternative family networks.

Pew’s 93-page report, based on a survey of 4,271 Black adults and 2,555 adults of other races, examines how Black Americans define and experience family, and how people support one another. Overall, 77% of Black Americans said their family includes at least one nonrelative, compared with 63% of adults of other races.

Kiana Cox, the senior researcher of the survey, noted the research examined the trope of Black Americans’ referring to people who are not relatives as cousins. “It’s sort of tongue in cheek,” she said. “We use the term ‘play cousin,’ because that’s the term that some Black people might be familiar with.”


Cox said one of the key findings is the extent to which relatives and nonrelatives serve as sources of financial and emotional support, as well as how widespread the extended family networks are.

“77% of Black Americans say their family includes someone who is not a relative” (Graphic courtesy of Pew Research Center)

Respondents who said they are religious were more likely to include a nonrelative in their family. About 60% of Black Christians reported having more than one nonrelative they consider family, compared with 53% of religiously unaffiliated Black adults, while 62% of Black adults who practice other religions said so.

Cox said Pew was limited to broad religious categories, Christian, non-Christian and unaffiliated, because of the small sample sizes of Black non-Christians. Some 70% of Black adults identify as Christian. “Because of sample size, we can’t break apart those other religions any further,” Cox said. “So we have a three-way break: Christian, non-Christian and unaffiliated.”

The survey also found that 72% of Black adults whose family included a nonrelated member said the nonrelative shared their religious or spiritual beliefs, as opposed to 56% of adults of other races. “Religion is a basis of connection, or a basis of definition, for these nonrelative family members because they share religious and spiritual beliefs,” Cox said. 

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