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- Frequency of reading horoscope (4251)
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- Agencies (including religious organizations) from which help sought during 2022 cost of living crisis (4249)
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Tag Archives: Christian conferences
Counting Religion in Britain, February 2019
Counting Religion in Britain, No. 41, February 2019 features 20 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 41 February 2019 OPINION … Continue reading
Posted in Historical studies, News from religious organisations, Official data, Religion and Ethnicity, Religion and Politics, Religion in public debate, Religious beliefs, Religious prejudice, Survey news
Tagged Amanda Dawn Aspland, anti-Semitic incidents, Anti-Semitism, atheism, banking system, British citizenship, Buddhism, Catholic Education Service for England and Wales, Charles Darwin, Christian conferences, Christianity, Church Army Research Unit, Community Security Trust, compatibility with UK values, ComRes, Conservative Party, conspiracy theories, Daniel Staetsky, Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs, Douglas Hall, Electoral Studies, ethnic minorities, evolution, extremism, familiarity with basic teachings, favourable/unfavourable opinion, Food Standards Agency, gender balance, general election, Gill Hall, global threats, halal, Hinduism, Hope Not Hate, Institute for Jewish Policy Research, inter-religious engagement, inter-religious marriage, ISIS, Islam, Islamic State, Jennie Formby, Jeremy Corbyn, Jewish Labour Movement, Jewish people, Judaism, Kantar Public UK, L&Q, Labour Party, London, Messy Church, Muslim Council of Elders, National Faith and Sexuality Survey, Nick Lowles, Nicole Martin, no go areas, Origin of Species, Ozanne Foundation, Pew Global Attitudes Survey, Populus, Project 3:28, prosecution, Puffin Books, Religious Affiliation, religious education, religious prejudice, religious slaughter of animals, Research in the Social Scientific Study of Religion, schools and colleges, sexual orientation, Shamima Begum, Sharia law, shechita, Sikhism, St Paul's Institute, Survation, Tania ap Sion, voting, William Deringer, YouGov, YouGov@Cambridge
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Counting Religion in Britain, January 2018
Counting Religion in Britain, No. 28, January 2018 features 26 new sources. It can be read in full below. Alternatively, you can download the PDF version: No 28 January 2018 OPINION POLLS Religious affiliation For a current snapshot of religious … Continue reading
Posted in church attendance, Historical studies, Ministry studies, News from religious organisations, Religion and Ethnicity, Religion and Politics, Religion in public debate, Religious beliefs, religious festivals, Religious prejudice, Survey news
Tagged abortion, Adrian Harris, adultery, anti-immigrant prejudice, BBC, British Election Studies, British Journal of Political Science, British Social Attitudes Surveys, Charity Awareness Monitor, Christian conferences, Christian Research, church, Church Army’s Research Unit, church attendance, Church in Wales, Church of England, Church of the Nazarene, Church Times, Churches’ Child Protection Advisory Service, churchmanship, ComRes, David Fielding, David Lankshear, David Voas, Detlef Pollack, digital evangelism, Donald Trump, Emma Eccles, EURISLAM Project, European Jewish Demography Hub, Evangelical Alliance, Faith schools, Gergely Rosta, Hezbollah, Illicit Encounters, Institute for Jewish Policy Research, Jerusalem, Jews, Journal of Empirical Theology, Journal of Research on Christian Education, Justin Humphreys, Kelvin Randall, Leslie Francis, Lisa Oakley, Michael Hirst, Muslim children, Muslims, Nadja Milewski, Naomi Thompson, National Survey for Wales, nfpSynergy, OneHope, ORB International, Oxford University Press, Peter Kellner, Phoebe Hill, Populus, prayer, primary schools, Project 3:28, relationships education, religion and modernity, Religious Affiliation, religious broadcasting, Religious diversity, religious festivals, Sarah Carol, science, science fiction technologies, Sociology of Religion, solidarity with the poor, spiritual abuse, Tearfund, terrorism, terrorist organization, The Times, trust, values, Wellcome Trust Monitor, Wesley and Methodist Studies, YouGov, youth, Youthscape
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Counting Religion in Britain, March 2017
Counting Religion in Britain, No. 18, March 2017 features 25 new sources. It can be read in full below. Alternatively, you can download the PDF version: No 18 March 2017 OPINION POLLS Belief at work ‘British employers struggle to manage … Continue reading
Posted in Attitudes towards Religion, Historical studies, News from religious organisations, Official data, Religion and Politics, Religion in public debate, Religion Online, Religious beliefs, Religious prejudice, Rites of Passage, Survey news
Tagged A Levels, Abby Day, Albion Urdank, Andrew Village, Annual Population Survey, Anti-Semitism, Association of Leading Visitor Attractions, atheism, Baptists, Bloomsbury, British Journal of Religious Education, Callum Brown, Christian conferences, Church of England, Clive Field, ComRes, conversation, Daniel Staetsky, David Geary, death anxiety, devolution, Ecumenism, educational attainment, Equality Act 2010, European Court of Justice, Faith Research Centre, Faith schools, Gijsbert Stoet, Hannah Stuart, Henry Jackson Society, historical demography, humanism, ICM, iCoCo Foundation, Institute for Jewish Policy Research, Intelligence, Islam, Islamic terrorism, Islamist terrorism, Jamin Halbertstadt, Jewish News, Jewish schools, Jonathan Boyd, Jonathan Jong, Journal of Beliefs and Values, Journal of the British Academy, Katie Harrison, Ken Livingstone, Labour Party, Leeds Beckett University, Leslie Francis, Lexington Books, Linda Woodhead, London, Mandy Robbins, marriages, Martin Camroux, mathematics, Nailsworth, Naomi Simons, Office for National Statistics, oral history, Oscar Watkins, Oxford University Press, Peter Webster, prayer, Project 3:28, Religion Brain and Behviour, Religious Affiliation, religious ceremonies, Religious discrimination, religious dress, religious education, religious nones, religious studies, religious symbols, rites of passage, Robert Ross, Rowan Williams, SchoolDash, science, Scotland, Scottish Crime and Justice Survey, segregation, Sharia law, Si-Hua Chang, Smith Commission, Social Compass, St Paul's Cathedral, Stephen Parker, The Challenge, threat to the UK, TNS-BMRB, Tristan Philip, UCL Press, United Reformed Church, University of Edinburgh, values, visitor attractions, Westminster Abbey, women, workplace, World Wide Web, YouGov
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Counting Religion in Britain, February 2016
Counting Religion in Britain, No. 5, February 2016 features 23 new sources. It can be read in full below. Alternatively, you can download the PDF version: No 5 February 2016 OPINION POLLS Prayer Two-fifths (42%) of 2,023 Britons answered in … Continue reading
Posted in News from religious organisations, Official data, People news, Religion and Politics, Religious beliefs, religious festivals, Religious prejudice, Survey news
Tagged abstinence, advertisements, Annual Population Survey, anti-Semitic incidents, Anti-Semitism, astrology, BBC, BMG Research, British values, Christian conferences, Christian Research, Christians, church buildings, Community Security Trust, ComRes, Crime Survey for England and Wales, David Voas, Donald Trump, EastEnders, Eurotrack, Evening Standard, female speakers, Health and Social Care Information Centre, Holocaust Memorial Day, Homepride Flour, hospital chaplains, Islam, Islamic State, Islamophobia, Jeremy Corbyn, Jewish Year Book, Lent, Methodist Church, mosque, Natalie Collins, National Churches Trust, Office for National Statistics, personal wellbeing, Pope Francis, prayer, Prayeronthemove, Project 3:28, Religious Affiliation, religious education teachers, Resonate, Scotland, Scottish Surveys Core Questions, shops, SPCK, star signs, Sunday trading, Taking Part: the National Survey of Culture Leisure and Sport, Telsolutions, TNS-BMRB, UCAS, Union of Shop Distributive and Allied Workers, University and College Admissions Service, USDAW, YouGov, YouGov@Cambridge
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Je suis Charlie and Other News
Last week’s news was dominated by a series of Islamist outrages in France, in which seventeen innocent people died, three police officers, four shoppers at a kosher supermarket, and ten journalists working for the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo, which in … Continue reading
Posted in Historical studies, News from religious organisations, Religion and Politics, Religion in the Press, Survey news
Tagged Catholic Directory of England and Wales, Charlie Hebdo, Christian conferences, Christianity, clergy, ComRes, David Ceri Jones, democracy, France, Ipsos-MORI, Islam, Islamism, Islamophobia, media, Michelangelo, NASUWT, Natalie Collins, Opinium Research, ORB International, parents, Populus, Project 3:28, Prophet Mohammed, religious ethos, religious leaders, Richard Allen, schools, self-assessed religiosity, Sistine Chapel, Sunday Times, trust, Wales, WIN/Gallup International, women speakers, works of art, YouGov
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Scrooging Christmas and Other News
Christmas has become such a secular festival in contemporary Britain that one might have thought that even non-religious people would have no difficulty in joining in, but our first story today shows a disproportionate dislike for Christmas on their part. … Continue reading
Posted in church attendance, News from religious organisations, Official data, People news, Religion in public debate, Religion in the Press, Religious Census, Survey news, visualisation
Tagged Catholic Education Service for England and Wales, Catholic schools, census of population, Christian conferences, Christmas, church growth, clergy, David Martin, Fair Admissions Campaign, Faith schools, gender equality, God Loves Women, Greater London, InFuse, Ipsos-MORI, Jewish Chronicle, Natalie Collins, Office for National Statistics, professionals, religious admissions criteria, Religious Affiliation, religious festivals, Sociology of Religion, trust, truth, women, YouGov
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