Seungju Kim

Seungju Kim
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign | UIUC · Department of Psychology

Bachelor of Arts
Seungju is interested in modeling religion, mental health, and prejudice.

About

5
Publications
128
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2
Citations
Introduction
Seungju Kim is a clinical psychology Ph.D. student at the University of Illinois. He is particularly interested in modeling (1) religiousness's influence on mental health, (2) religious prejudice, and (3) religious/spiritual resilience among communities of color, SGM/LGBTQ+, and faith using SEM, GLM, and psychometrics.
Additional affiliations
Wheaton College Illinois
Position
  • Research Assistant, SGI Institute
Education
August 2024 - May 2031
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Field of study
  • Clinical Psychology
August 2020 - December 2023
Wheaton College
Field of study
  • Psychology

Publications

Publications (5)
Preprint
Public support for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and queer (LGBQ) individuals in the United States has historically increased since 1996, yet religious leaders' perspectives remain understudied using large quantitative approaches. Using a nationally representative sample of religious leaders from the National Survey of Religious Leaders (N = 1,600), we t...
Preprint
In spite of the substantial historical and ongoing contributions of female religious leaders to the life of religious communities around the world, little is understood about their contrasting experiences in a context that tends to be male normative, especially from an empirical perspective. Poorly understood experiences of female religious leaders...
Preprint
Despite the increasing prominence of Christian nationalism within the U.S. population and its concerning associations with anti-democratic attitudes and racial bias, little is known about how highly spiritual individuals engage with Christian nationalism. Moreover, while extant research has examined demographic and political associations with Chris...
Article
Full-text available
With a sample of 1,176 lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer/questioning (LGBTQ+) Americans, we examined the core propositions of the religious/spiritual stress and resilience (RSSR) model (Lefevor, Etengoff, et al., 2023), which explains how and when religiousness is related to health for sexual and gender minorities. We found support for...

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