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Tag Archives: Board of Deputies of British Jews
Counting Religion in Britain, October 2020
Counting Religion in Britain, No. 61, October 2020 features 23 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 61 October 2020 … Continue reading
Posted in Attitudes towards Religion, Ministry studies, News from religious organisations, Official data, Religion and Education, Religion and Ethnicity, Religion and Politics, Religion and Social Capital, Religion in public debate, Religious beliefs, religious festivals, Religious prejudice, Survey news
Tagged Academy schools, Aisha Phoenix, Aliens, Alison Scott-Baumann, Andrew Village, Anti-Semitism, Baptist Times, Baptist Union, black Christians, Board of Deputies of British Jews, Bonfire Night, Carli Lessof, Carmel Murphy, Chine McDonald, Christian Aid, Christmas, church attendance, church buildings, Church of England, Church Times, clergy, climate change, climate justice, communal worship, conspiracy theories, coronavirus, Covid-19, Crime Survey for England and Wales, Daniel Staetsky, David Graham, David Lawrence, Dom Llewellyn, economic and social value, economic disadvantage, emotional and psychological wellbeing, England and Wales, Equality and Human Rights Commission, European Jewish Demography Unit, face masks, gift-giving, Gregory Davis, Halloween, Hanbury Strategy, happiness, Hassidic communities, hate crime, holidays, Home Office, Hope Not Hate, Institute for Jewish Policy Research, Ipsos Global Advisor, Ipsos-MORI, Islam, Islamophobia, Jeremy Corbyn, Jews, Joe Ware, Jonathan Boyd, Keir Starmer, Labour Party, Laurence Lovat, Leslie Francis, Lindsey Donoghue, Litvish communities, Living Ministry, Liz Graveling, lockdown, Mathew Guest, mental wellbeing, Mike Lowe, mortality, Muslims, National Churches Trust, National Secular Society, New Year, Oxford University Press, police, QAnon, racism and racial inequality, Religion Media Centre, Religious Affiliation, religious festivals, religious or spiritual wellbeing, religious prejudice, residential segregation, rites of passage, Samaritan’s Purse UK, Sariya Cheruvallil-Contractor, satanic cults, Savanta ComRes, secularization, Sergio DellaPergola, Shlomit Flint Ashery, shop opening hours, Shuruq Naguib, social action, Springer, State of Life, statistics for mission, Steve Bruce, Strictly Orthodox Jews, Sunday trading, universities, University College London, wellbeing and flourishing, YouGov, YouGov@Cambridge, YourNeighbour
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Counting Religion in Britain, June 2020
Counting Religion in Britain, No. 57, June 2020 features 23 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 57 June 2020 … Continue reading
Posted in Attitudes towards Religion, church attendance, Historical studies, Ministry studies, News from religious organisations, Official data, Religion and Politics, Religion in public debate, Religious prejudice, Survey news
Tagged Andrew Village, Annual Population Survey, Anti-Semitism, attendance at religious services, Baptist Union of Great Britain, Ben Clements, Board of Deputies of British Jews, British Journal of Religious Education, Catherine Pepinster, Catholic Voices, Catholics in Britain, charity trustees, Christian-ethos schools, Church Commissioners, church membership, Church of England, Church Times, Common Era, coronavirus, Covid-19, Elaine Howard Eklund, Evangelical Alliance, Health Survey for England, Islamophobia, Jacksons Fencing, Jews, John Clayton, Jonathan Boyd, Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, Leslie Francis, Lindsay Richards, lockdown, London, meditation, Methodist Church, Methodist Recorder, Michael Hirst, ministry, mortality, NatCen Social Research, Nathan Mladin, National Safeguarding Team, NHS Digital, North East England, Office for National Statistics, ordination of women, Paul Bickley, Peter Hopkins, places of worship, Populus, prayer, Religious Affiliation, religious charities, religious prejudice, religious studies, Robert Thomson, Roman Catholic Church, Savanta ComRes, science, secondary schools, security, Sharan Kaur Mehta, shop opening hours, Siobhan McAndrew, social inclusion, socialization, Sunday trading, Sunday Trading Act 1994, Survation, Tell MAMA, The Tablet, Theos, United Reformed Church, York St John University, YouGov
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Counting Religion in Britain, April 2020
Counting Religion in Britain, No. 55, April 2020 features 13 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 55 April 2020 … Continue reading
Posted in church attendance, Ministry studies, News from religious organisations, Official data, Religion and Ethnicity, Religion in public debate, Religion in the Press, Religious beliefs, Religious Census, Rites of Passage, Survey news
Tagged Andrew Norfolk, Anglo-Catholic churches, Ben Clements, black and minority ethnic communities, Board of Deputies of British Jews, Catholic Herald, census of population, Charity Awareness Monitor, Church of England, Church Times, churchgoing, conspiracy theories, coronavirus, Covid-19, David Katz, ethnicity, FutureFirst, horoscopes and star signs, Jewish Chronicle, Jewish News, Jews, John Tomlinson, Jonathan Boyd, Leslie Francis, Mark Griffiths, mass attendance, Ministry of Justice, Miriam Partington, mortality, Muslims, New Statesman, nfpSynergy, Office for National Statistics, Opinium Research, prediction, prisoners, Religion Media Centre, Religious Affiliation, religious marriages, religious press, religious revival, retired clergy, Richard Webber, rites of passage, Roman Catholic Church, Roman Catholics, Sacristy Press, Savanta ComRes, Scottish Government, Sebastian Shehadi, Sikh Federation UK, Sikhs, Simon Rocker, The Times, Tony Neal, Trevor Phillips, trust in the Church, Wales
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Counting Religion in Britain, March 2020
Counting Religion in Britain, No. 54, March 2020 features 11 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 54 March 2020 … Continue reading
Posted in church attendance, Historical studies, News from religious organisations, Official data, Religion and Ethnicity, Religion and Social Capital, Religion in public debate, Religious beliefs, Religious prejudice, Survey news
Tagged Advance HE, Amber Curtis, Anglicans, Anti-Semitism, Ben Clements, Board of Deputies of British Jews, British Future, British Journal of Religious Education, British Muslims, Catholics in Britain, caution, Census of Hallucinations, Christian activities or services, Christopher Keep, church attendance, Church in Wales, Church of England, coronavirus, Crest Advisory, Crime Survey for England and Wales, Dan Forman, David Lankshear, deaths, Emma Eccles, England, Friday the thirteenth, Higher Education Statistics Agency, higher education students, humanists, Humanists UK, ICM Unlimited, Islamist extremism, Islamophobia, Jeremy Rodell, Jerusalem Trust, Jewish Chronicle, Jewish News, Jews, Jon Clements, Jonathan Boyd, Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, Journal of Beliefs and Values, Journal of British Muslim Studies, Kantar Public, Laura Olson, Leslie Francis, Manon Roberts, Muslims, Natasha Codiroli Mcmaster, Ozanne Foundation, policing, Pope Francis, PREVENT, primary schools, reading habits, religion and spirituality books, Religious Affiliation, religious hate crime, religious identification, religious prejudice, same-sex marriage, Savanta ComRes, Stephen Bullivant, talked about, theology, triskaidekaphobia, Ursula McKenna, Victorian Studies, virtual congregation, Wales, YouGov
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Counting Religion in Britain, July 2017
Counting Religion in Britain, No. 22, July 2017 features 12 new sources. It can be read in full below. Alternatively, you can download the PDF version: No 22 July 2017 OPINION POLLS Trust in religious figures Only a minority (22%) of … Continue reading
Posted in News from religious organisations, Official data, Religion and Politics, Religion in public debate, Religious prejudice, Survey news
Tagged Anti-Defamation League, anti-Semitic crimes, anti-Semitic incidents, Anti-Semitism, Be Reasonable, Ben Clements, Board of Deputies of British Jews, British Election Study, British values, Campaign against Antisemitism, Charity Awareness Monitor, civil service, Community Security Trust, ComRes, Dalai Lama, Donatella Casale Mashiah, Economic and Social Research Council, Evangelical Alliance, extremism, extremist figures, Freedom of Information Act, GlobeScan, influence in the world, Institute for Jewish Policy Research, Islam, Islamophobia, Israel, Jesus Christ, Jewish Chronicle, Jewish News, Jews, Jonathan Boyd, Muslims, negative stereotypes, nfpSynergy, Populus, Religious Affiliation, ScotCen Social Research, Scotland, Scottish Social Attitudes Survey, senior religious figures, Survation, synagogue membership, trust, University of Maryland, Wales, YouGov, YouGov@Cambridge
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Counting Religion in Britain, November 2016
Counting Religion in Britain, No. 14, November 2016 features 29 new sources. It can be read in full below. Alternatively, you can download the PDF version: no-14-november-2016 OPINION POLLS Freedom of speech The case involving Ashers Bakery in Belfast, found … Continue reading
Posted in church attendance, News from religious organisations, Official data, Religion and Politics, Religion and Social Capital, Religion in public debate, Religious beliefs, religious festivals, Religious prejudice, Rites of Passage, Survey news
Tagged 2021 census, 5Ks, A Levels, Accord Coalition, All Hallows’ Eve, Andrew Village, Anti-Semitism, Ashers Bakery, Balfour Declaration, Belfast, BICOM, BMG Research, Board of Deputies of British Jews, Bonfire Night, Britain Israel Communications and Research Centre, British Humanist Association, British Sikh Report, British values, business people, Cabinet Office, charitable giving, Chief Rabbi, Christian Today, Christianity, Christmas, Christopher Deacy, Church Army Research Unit, church growth, Church of England, Claire Dalpra, Coalition for Marriage, Community Life Survey, ComRes, conservative evangelical churches, court action, cryogenics, Dabinderjit Singh, Daniel Staetsky, David Lankshear, David Wasdell, Department for Culture Media and Sport, dominant world faith, Donald Trump, economic prosperity, English Longitudinal Study of Ageing, faith in God, Faith schools, freedom of speech, Fresh Expressions of Church, friends, fundamental clash, George Lings, Glasgow Household Survey, goods and services, Halloween, higher education, Hillary Clinton, Historic England, Institute for Jewish Policy Research, International Longevity Centre–UK, ISIS, Islam, Islamic State, Islamophobia, Israel, Jas Singh, Jeff Astley, Jewish schools, Jews, John Vivian, Jonathan Boyd, Journal of Beliefs and Values, Judaism, Leslie Francis, Major Parish Churches, Millward Brown, moral values, Nick Spencer, Northern Ireland, old people, Olwyn Mark, parents and children, Populus, Protestant ethic, Purcell, Randeep Singh, Religion and Politics, Religious Affiliation, Religious discrimination, religious groups, religious socialization, religious studies, rites of passage, Rural Theology, same-sex marriage, school admission policies, Scotland, Scottish Surveys Core Questions, secularization, ShabbatUK, Sikh Genocide, Sikh Manifesto, Sikh Network, Sikhs, state-funded schools, statistics for mission, Stephen Parker, Student Christian Movement, system of beliefs, Taking Part, Theos, Theresa May, TNS-BMRB, transmission of faith, UK Sikh Survey, Understanding Society, United States presidential election, Universities UK, University of Cambridge, university students, volunteering, workplace, YouGov, YouGov-Cambridge
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Coronation Service and Other News
Coronation service Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II has just become the longest-reigning monarch in British history, so it has been a considerable time (1953) since there has been a coronation in Britain. But already thoughts are beginning to turn … Continue reading
Posted in church attendance, News from religious organisations, Religion and Politics, Religion and Social Capital, Rites of Passage, Survey news
Tagged Association of Convenience Stores, Board of Deputies of British Jews, British Corner Shop, British traditions, Christian Research, Christianity, churchgoing, Co-operative Funeralcare, ComRes, coronation, drone strike, fleshandblood, funerals, ICM Unlimited, Institute for Jewish Policy Research, Islamic State, Jewish community statistics, Nicholas Dixon, Nick Spencer, organ donation, Resonate, Sunday trading, Syria, Theos, Wales, Welsh Election Study, Welsh Referendum Study, YouGov
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