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Tag Archives: Kantar UK
Counting Religion in Britain, September 2021
Counting Religion in Britain, No. 72, September 2021 features 15 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 72 September 2021 … Continue reading →
Posted in church attendance, Covid-19, Ministry studies, News from religious organisations, Religion and Education, Religion and Politics, Religion in public debate, Religion in the Press, Religion Online, Religious beliefs, Religious prejudice, Survey news
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Tagged Aisha Phoenix, Alana Vincent, Alison Scott-Baumann, Andrew Village, Anglican clergy, animal slaughter, Anti-Semitism, Association of English Cathedrals, atheism, balanced affect, Bethan Juliet Oake, Board of Deputies of British Jews, Cathedrals, Centre for Holocaust Education, Centre for Muslim Policy Research, church attendance, Church of England, Church Times, coronavirus, Covid-19, Culham St Gabriel’s Trust, David Johnson, Deltapoll, Ecorys, Elaine Howard Ecklund, Eleanor O’Keeffe, Elizabeth Poole, Eternal Wall of Answered Prayer, Eurobarometer, European Commission, evolution, Faith schools, focaldata, halal, higher education, holistic practice, holocaust, Hope Not Hate, immigration from Muslim-majority countries, Islam, Jeremy Corbyn, Jewish Chronicle, Jewish News, Jews, Joshua Edelman, Journalism, Kantar UK, Labour Party, Labour Uncut, Leslie Francis, Manchester Metropolitan University, Maryanne Martin, Mathew Guest, Milly Williamson, mindfulness, mortality, Muslims, National Secular Society, newspapers, Otto Simonsson, Oxford University Press, Panelbase, Paulina Kolata, prayer, Quakers, religious education, religious prejudice, Religious Society of Friends, ritual innovation, Sariya Cheruvallil-Contractor, Savanta ComRes, science, scientists, Scotland, secondary school teachers, Secularism and Nonreligion, Shurruq Naguib, social media, Sociological Research Online, spiritual but not religious, Stephen Fisher, Sunday Times Scotland, synagogues, University of Chester, Yonder
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Counting Religion in Britain, December 2019
Counting Religion in Britain, No. 51, December 2019 features 19 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 51 December 2019 … Continue reading →
Posted in Ministry studies, News from religious organisations, Official data, Religion and Ethnicity, Religion and Politics, Religion in public debate, Religious Census, religious festivals, Religious prejudice, Survey news
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Tagged Abt SRBI Inc, Annual Population Survey, anti-Semitic, Anti-Semitism, Arizona State University, armed forces, Avaaz, Ben Clements, BICOM, Brexit, British Election Study Internet Panel, British Israel Communications and Research Centre, British Journal of Sociology, British Religion in Numbers, Catholic Herald, census of population, Christmas, Church of England, clergy, Cross-National Survey of Muslim Attitudes, Deltapoll, dislike, diversity statistics, ethnic group, Eurobarometer, European Commission, European Union, feeling of community, Finchley and Golders Green, flourishing, general election, Henry Jackson Society, High Court, household size and composition, ICM Unlimited, ISIS, Islam, Islamic State, Islamophobia, Israel, James Sorene, Jeremy Corbyn, Jewish Chronicle, Jewish Leadership Council, Jewish News, Jews, Jonathan Boyd, Kantar UK, Katherin Barg, Labour Party, living arrangements, Living Ministry Research Project, Liz Graveling, Lord Ashcroft, Louise McFerran, Luciana Berger, majority Jewish state, Middle East, Millennium Cohort Study, ministerial effectiveness, Mrs Justice Lang, Muslims, Office for National Statistics, ordinands, Palestinian-Israeli conflict, parental values, Party Choice, Patrick Loughran, Peter Kellner, Pew Global Attitudes Survey, Pew Research Center, Peyman Hekmatpour, politics, Populus, racist way, Religious Affiliation, religious festivals, religious prejudice, religious values, residential segregation, right to exist, Roman Catholics, Roman Catholics in Britain, Savanta ComRes, separation of powers, Sikh Federation, Sikhs, Siobhan McAndrew, Stephen Bullivant, Thomas Burns, Tony Blair Institute for Global Change, Tottenham Hotspur Football Club, values, voting, Watermelon Research, wellbeing, Western hostility to Islam, William Baker, Yid, YouGov, YouGov Profiles
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Counting Religion in Britain, August 2019
Counting Religion in Britain, No. 47, August 2019 features 15 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 47 August 2019 … Continue reading →
Posted in Ministry studies, News from religious organisations, Official data, Religion and Politics, Religion in public debate, Religious prejudice, Rites of Passage, Survey news
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Tagged acts of religious worship, Ahmadiyya UK, Andrew Village, anti-Muslim incidents, archdeacons, Bertelsmann Stiftung, British citizenship, British Journal of Religious Education, British values, Canada, celebrants, children of Islamic State fighters, Church Growth Research Programme, Church in Wales, Church of England, clergy, Co-operative Funeralcare, ComRes, David Lankshear, David Lundie, David Voas, Emma Eccles, Eurobarometer, European Commission, European Union, Faith schools, funerals, GCE A Level, GCSE Level, Gemma Penny, Gert Pickel, Greek Journal of Religious Education, Home for Good, humanist celebrants, Humanists UK, Ian Jones, Islam, Islamic State, Islamophobia, Jack Letts, Jeff Astley, Joint Council for Qualifications, Journal of Anglican Studies, Journal of Empirical Theology, Kantar UK, Leslie Francis, Mi Young Ahn, Michael Whinney, mini-golf, Muslims, National Records of Scotland, negative view, Pastoral Psychology, prayer, psychological profile, psychology of religion, public examinations, Religion Monitor, Religious diversity, religious education, Religious Moral and Philosophical Studies, religious pluralism, religious settings, religious studies, Rochester Cathedral, school assemblies, Scotland, Scottish Qualifications Authority, Simon Foster, solemnization of marriages, Tania ap Sion, Teacher Tapp, teachers, Tell MAMA, Ursula McKenna, values, violence against non-Muslims, vulnerable children, YouGov
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Counting Religion in Britain, January 2019
Counting Religion in Britain, No. 40, January 2019 features 22 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 40 January 2019 OPINION … Continue reading →
Posted in church attendance, Historical studies, Ministry studies, News from religious organisations, Religion and Ethnicity, Religion and Politics, Religion and Social Capital, Religion in public debate, Religion Online, Religious beliefs, Religious prejudice, Survey news
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Tagged Abdullah Sahin, abortion, Adam Stevenson, adolescents, Aliens, Andrew Blick, Andrew Fincham, Andrew Village, Anti-Semitism, Antisemitism Policy Trust, apartheid state, attendance at religious services, BBC, biologists, Board of Deputies of British Jews, boycott, Brexit, British Election Study, British Political Facts, Censuswide, Christopher Scheitle, church attendance, Church of England, Church Times, Civic Engagement, clergy, Clive Field, Common Era, Community Security Trust, David Butler, David Graham, disestablishment, Elaine Howard Ecklund, Eurobarometer, European Commission Directorate-General for Justice and Consumers, European Union, euthanasia, Gallup International, GfK, ghosts, God, Google searches, Holiness, holocaust, Holocaust Memorial Day Trust, Institute for Jewish Policy Research, Ipsos Global Advisor, Ipsos-MORI, Israel, Jared Peifer, Jewish schools, Jonathan Boyd, Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, Kantar UK, Karam Dana, Kassra Oskooii, Leslie Francis, Local Historian, local preachers, Martin Petzke, Methodist Church, Middle East, missionary societies, monarchy, mosque attendance, Muslims, National Secular Society, Opinion Matters, ORB International, Palgrave Macmillan, physicists, political engagement, politics, Pope Francis, predictions, psychological type, Quakers, referendum, Religion among Scientists in International Context, Religions, Religious Affiliation, Religious discrimination, religious prejudice, Roger Mortimore, scientists, ScotCen Social Research, Scotland, Scottish Health Survey, Seth Stephens-Davidowitz, Social Science History, Springer, Sunday Telegraph, supernatural, Supreme Governor, University Challenge, Ursula McKenna, victimization, YouGov, Young People’s Attitudes toward Religious Diversity Project
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Counting Religion in Britain, December 2018
Counting Religion in Britain, No. 39, December 2018 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 39 December 2018 … Continue reading →
Posted in church attendance, Ministry studies, News from religious organisations, Official data, People news, Religion and Ethnicity, Religion and Politics, Religion in public debate, Religious beliefs, Religious Census, religious festivals, Religious prejudice, Survey news
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Tagged Andrew Village, Anti-Semitism, Archbishop of Canterbury, Arts and Humanities Research Council, Barna Global, Ben Clements, brain drain, British values, carols, census of population, Child and Family Law Quarterly, Christmas, church attendance, Church of England, Church Times, civil marriage, clergy, ComRes, Daily Telegraph, David Smith, David Voas, discrimination, End Violence against Women Coalition, engagement in Jewish life, ethnicity, Eurobarometer, European Union, European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights, Faith schools, God, Graeme Nixon, hate crime, ICM Unlimited, Institute for Jewish Policy Research, Ipsos-MORI, Islam, Islamophobia, Jews, Jo Pearce, Journal of Empirical Theology, Justin Welby, Kantar UK, Leslie Francis, liberalism-conservatism scale, Muslims, National Association of Teachers of Religious Education, National Secular Society, Pastor Poll, Perils of Perception, politics, prayer, primary schools, racial bias, Rebecca Probert, Religions, Religious Affiliation, religious education, Religious Education Council of England and Wales, religious education teachers, religious festivals, Roman Catholics, Royal Holloway University of London, sexual violence, Stephanie Pywell, Stephen Bullivant, Stephen Miller, stress, The Guardian, The Times, Theos, values, violence, Yahoo, YouGov, YouGov@Cambridge
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