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Tag Archives: armed forces
Counting Religion in Britain, June 2022
Counting Religion in Britain, No. 81, June 2022 features seven new sources of British religious statistics. The contents list appears below and a PDF version of the full text can be downloaded from the following link No 81 June 2022 … Continue reading
Posted in Historical studies, Official data, Religion and Ethnicity, Religious Census, Religious prejudice, Survey news
Tagged Animal testing, armed forces, Campaign for Common Sense, census of population, diversity, Gallup Poll, Home Office, Hyphen, Islamophobia, Jews, marriage, Muslims, National Records of Scotland, religious prejudice, religious profession, Roper Center for Public Opinion Research, RSPCA, Savanta ComRes, Scotland, University of Southampton, YouGov
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Counting Religion in Britain, August 2020
Counting Religion in Britain, No. 59, August 2020 features 21 new sources of British religious statistics. The contents list appears below and a PDF version of the full text can be downloaded from the following link: No 59 August 2020 … Continue reading
Posted in Attitudes towards Religion, church attendance, Covid-19, News from religious organisations, Official data, Religion and Ethnicity, Religion and Politics, Religion and Social Capital, Religion in public debate, Religion in the Press, Religion Online, Religious beliefs, Religious Census, Religious prejudice, Rites of Passage, Survey news
Tagged A Levels, Annual Population Survey, Anti-Semitism, armed forces, atheist, attendance at religious services, Bible, British Academy, British Future, Cabinet Office, census of population, Centre for Media Monitoring, channels of communication, Christian Welfare organizations, civil servants, coronavirus, corporate worship, Coventry University, Covid-19, Durham University Online Church Research Group, Ecclesiastical, Faisal Hanif, faith-based organizations, Free to Disagree, friends, GCSEs, God, Hate Crime and Public Order (Scotland) Bill, hate crimes, Henry Jackson Society, humanists, ICM Unlimited, influence of religion, Islamophobia, Jewish Chronicle, Jewish News, life after death, lockdown, media, meditation, Ministry of Defence, mortality, Muslim Council of Britain, Muslims, National Records of Scotland, Nigeria, Nigerian Christians, Office for National Statistics, Opinium Research, Paul Bickley, Paul Weller, persecution of Christians, places of worship, prayer, PSJ UK, public examinations, Rakib Ehsan, Religious Affiliation, religious beliefs, religious census, religious divisions, Religious Education Council of England and Wales, religious persecution, religious person, religious prejudice, religious studies, Savanta ComRes, Scotland, shopping, solemnization of marriages, spiritual greater power, spirituality, stirring up hatred, Sunday trading, terrorism, The Observer, Theos, Wasiq Wasiq, YouGov
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Counting Religion in Britain, July 2019
Counting Religion in Britain, No. 46, July 2019 features 17 new sources of British religious statistics. The contents list appears below and a PDF version of the full text can be downloaded from the following link: No 46 July 2019 … Continue reading
Posted in church attendance, Historical studies, News from religious organisations, Official data, Religion and Politics, Religion in public debate, Religion in the Press, Religious beliefs, Religious prejudice, Survey news
Tagged active Christians, admired living public figures, Amy Unsworth, anti-Semitic incidents, Anti-Semitism, armed forces, Ben Clements, British Social Attitudes Survey, Cabinet Office, Centre for Media Monitoring, Channel 4, charitable giving, Christian Aid, civil service, climate change, Community Life Survey, Community Security Trust, compatibility with British way of life, ComRes, Conservative Party, Countryside Alliance, Dalai Lama, David Voas, Department for Digital Culture Media and Sport, Department for Education, diet, European Values Study, Faisal Hanif, Faith schools, Hope Not Hate, International Social Survey Programme, Islam, Jeremy Corbyn, Jews, Kantar Public, Labour Party, media, mental health problem, Ministry of Defence, Money and Mental Health Policy Institute, money management, Muslim Council of Britain, National Centre for Social Research, Nick Spencer, ORB International, political party members, Pope Francis, Populus, Religious Affiliation, religious beliefs, religious hate crime, religious prejudice, science, Scotland, Scottish Government, secularization, Steve Bruce, The Times, Theos, volunteering, YouGov
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Counting Religion in Britain, November 2017
Counting Religion in Britain, No. 26, November 2017 features 23 new sources. It can be read in full below. Alternatively, you can download the PDF version: No 26 November 2017 OPINION POLLS Good life What makes for a good life in … Continue reading
Posted in church attendance, News from religious organisations, Official data, Religion and Ethnicity, Religion and Politics, Religious prejudice, Survey news
Tagged Andrew Village, armed forces, attendance at religious services, BBC, British Household Panel Survey, British Journal of Sociology, British Social Attitudes Survey, cathedrals and churches, Channel 4, Christian Research, Christmas, Church of England, clergy, ComRes, ethnic minorities, Ethnic Minority British Election Survey, European Social Survey, Gemma Penny, gender fluidity, general election, GfK, good life, Health Survey for England, hijab, historic buildings, household income, Ingrid Storm, International Lesbian Gay Bisexual Trans and Intersex Association, interreligious marriage, Ipsos-MORI, Islamic State, Islamophobia, Journal of Religion in Europe, Leslie Francis, Maria Sobolewska, marriage, migration, mosques, Muslims, NatCen Social Research, National Churches Trust, NHS Digital, Nikah, Ofsted, Oxford Review of Education, Pew Research Center, politics, polygamy, prayer, prejudice, primary schools, Religious Affiliation, religious broadcasting, Religious diversity, religious dress, religious education, Religious Identity, RIWI, Robert Ford, royal family, schools, ScotCen Social Research, Scotland, Scottish Health Survey, self-assessed religiosity, sexual identity, sexual orientation, Social Distance, spiritual enrichment, Syria, The Times, Thought for the Day, Today, True Vision Aire, trust, Understanding Society, University College London, Ursula McKenna, veracity, voting, YouGov, Young People’s Attitudes to Religious Diversity Project
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Counting Religion in Britain, June 2017
Counting Religion in Britain, No. 21, June 2017 features 23 new sources. It can be read in full below. Alternatively, you can download the PDF version: No 21 June 2017 OPINION POLLS Religion and the general election The actual political … Continue reading
Posted in Attitudes towards Religion, Historical studies, News from religious organisations, Official data, Religion and Ethnicity, Religion and Politics, Religion and Social Capital, Religion in public debate, Religious beliefs, Religious prejudice, Survey news
Tagged Accord Coalition, Active People Survey, armed forces, Benjamin Netanyahu, black and minority ethnic voters, British Humanist Association, British Muslim leaders, British Social Attitudes Survey, British values, Christians against Poverty, church growth, Church of England, Daniel Allington, David Voas, debt, discrimination, Eleanor Attar Taylor, European Social Survey, Faith schools, Finsbury Park mosque, forces for good, fundamental clash, general election, God, Handelsblatt, Heythrop College, Hope Not Hate, humanism, Humanists UK, ICM Unlimited, inter-faith relations, Islam, Islamist terrorism, Islamophobia, Israel, Jewish Chronicle, Jews, Katherine Myant, Kirby Swales, Liberal Democrats, Lord Ashcroft, Methodist Church, Michael Breen, Mike Hornsby-Smith, Ministry of Defence, morality, NatCen Social Research, national anthem, National Union of Teachers, Opinium Research, party ideology, political leaders, politics, Populus, poverty, Reaktion Books, Rebecca Foster, Religious Affiliation, religious intolerance, religious prejudice, religiously aggravated offending, Roman Catholic Church, Routledge, Rural Theology, Scotland, Scottish Government, Scottish Social Attitudes Survey, social liberalism, Steven Connor, Survation, terrorism, The Times, Tim Farron, voting, YouGov
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Counting Religion in Britain, November 2015
Counting Religion in Britain, No. 2, November 2015 features no fewer than 41 new sources. It can be read in full below. Alternatively, you can download the PDF version: No 2 November 2015 OPINION POLLS – GENERAL Religious affiliation ORB … Continue reading
Posted in Historical studies, Ministry studies, News from religious organisations, Official data, Religion and Politics, Religion and Social Capital, Religion in public debate, Religion in the Press, Religious beliefs, Religious Census, religious festivals, Religious prejudice, Rites of Passage, Survey news
Tagged advertisement, air strikes, Andrew Village, armed forces, Arts and Humanities Research Council, Arzu Merali, Bashar al-Assad, being human, BICOM, BMG Research, Britain Israel Communications and Research Centre, British Future, British Jews, Cabinet Office, Catholic Education Service for England and Wales, Catholicity, charitable giving, Christian Research, Christians, Christine Brewster, Christmas, Church of England, Church Times, City University, clergy, Clive Field, Colin Shindler, Community Life Survey, ComRes, Daily Mail, Daily Mirror, David Cameron, David Graham, David Voas, Digital Cinema Media, Embrace the Middle East, European Union, Eurotrack, Evening Standard, finance, freedom of speech, freedom to practice religion, funerals, Great Britain, ground troops, ICM Unlimited, Ideate Research, importance of God, importance of religion, Independent Press Standards Organisation, Institute for Jewish Policy Research, Integrated Household Survey, integration, Ipsos-MORI, Iraq, Islam, Islamic Human Rights Commission, Islamic State, Islamophobia, Israel, Israelis, Jeremy Corbyn, Jewish state, Jihadi John, Journal of Beliefs and Values, Journal of Empirical Theology, Labour Party, Laura Watt, leadership skills, Leave.EU, Leslie Francis, life after death, London, Lord's Prayer, Margaret Harris, Mental Health Religion and Culture, Middle East, military action, Ministry of Defence, Ministry of Justice, Mohammed Emwazi, Muslims, NatCen Social Research, National Offender Management Service, nature of the Church, negotiation, opinion polls, Opinium Research, ORB International, organized religion, Palestine, Paris, Parliament, people of different faiths, Pew Global Attitudes Project, police and security services, Pope Francis, poppy, Populus, prayer, Premier Christian Media, pride in religion, Princeton Survey Research Associates International, prisoners, psychological types, psychological well-being, Religiosity, Religious Affiliation, Religious discrimination, religious meaning, religious texts, Remembrance Day, Resonate, Rural Theology, Saied Reza Ameli, saliency of religion, schools and colleges, Scotland, spirituality, Stephen Miller, Survation, Syria, terrorism, terrorist acts, The Independent, The Sun, The Times, TNS-BMRB, Understanding Society, United Kingdom Household Longitudinal Study, United States, volunteering, Western countries, World War III, Yachad, YouGov, YouGov@Cambridge, youth social action
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Current Voting Intentions and Other News
Current voting intentions We are almost through the party political conference season for another year, and the 2015 general election campaign seems already to have started, so it is perhaps an appropriate time to review the state of the … Continue reading
Posted in Historical studies, News from religious organisations, Official data, Religion and Politics, Survey news
Tagged armed forces, Bedfordshire, Bedfordshire Historical Record Society, Church in Wales, church membership, Clive Field, ComRes, David Graham, Faith schools, finance, House of Commons Library, Institute for Jewish Policy Research, Iraq, Islamic State, ITV News, Jewish identity, Jonathan Rodell, Journal of Ecclesiastical History, Lord Ashcroft Polls, Methodism, Methodist Church, Ministry of Defence, National Jewish Student Survey, Populus, Religious Affiliation, Robert Schofield, spirituality, Sunday Times, Syria, The Independent, voting intention, YouGov
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