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Tag Archives: labour market
Counting Religion in Britain, July 2022
Counting Religion in Britain, No. 82, July 2022 features sixteen 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 82 July 2022 … Continue reading
Posted in church attendance, Covid-19, Historical studies, News from religious organisations, Official data, Religion and Education, Religion and Politics, religious festivals, Religious prejudice, Survey news
Tagged 9 Dot Research, Abidemi Otaiku, Andrew Village, Annual Review of the Sociology of Religion, anti-Semitic incidents, Anti-Semitism, Ben Gidley, Bev Botting, Bob Jackson, Brill, Charlotte Littlewood, Christians, church attendance, Church of England, Church Pastoral Aid Society, Church Times, civil service, Clive Field, coronavirus, Covid-19, Covid-19 and Church-21 Survey, Deltapoll, Easter, English Longitudinal Study of Aging, Ethnic and Racial Studies, Evidence-Based Mental Health, Henry Jackson Society, Islamophobia, Jews, Journal of Contemporary Religion, Journal of Religion and Health, labour market, Leslie Francis, Liverpool, Mail on Sunday, MEND, Mental Health, Merseyside, Merseyside Jewish Representative Council, mindfulness, mosques, Muslim Census, Muslim penalty, Muslims, Office for National Statistics, Parkinson’s disease, peer evangelism, Philip Sapiro, politics, prime minister, Ralph Hood, Religious Affiliation, religious festivals, religious prejudice, religiously motivated attacks, Research in the Social Scientific Study of Religion, Samir Sweida-Metwally, Samuel Sami Everett, Sariya Cheruvallil-Contractor, Savanta ComRes, Scripture Union, secondary schools, secularization, Steve Bruce, UK Household Longitudinal Study, vaccination rates, Willem Kuyken, YouGov, young people
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Counting Religion in Britain, April 2017
Counting Religion in Britain, No. 19, April 2017 features 27 new sources. It can be read in full below. Alternatively, you can download the PDF version: No 19 April 2017 OPINION POLLS Lenten abstinence and Easter activities Just under one-fifth … Continue reading
Posted in Attitudes towards Religion, church attendance, News from religious organisations, Official data, Religion and Ethnicity, Religion and Politics, Religion in public debate, Religion in the Press, Religious beliefs, religious festivals, Religious prejudice, Survey news
Tagged 9dot-research, abstinence, academic research, active membership of religious groups, attendance at religious services, BBC, Ben Clements, Benedict XVI Centre for Religion and Society, BMG Research, Brexit, British Household Panel Survey, British Sociological Association, Burka, Cadbury, Care for the Family, census of population, Chris Dibben, Christian Institute, church attendance, church growth, church membership, Church of England, Church of England Newspaper, Church Times, ComRes, Daily Telegraph, David Voas, David Wright, Dermot O’Reilly, Easter, Easter eggs, Englishness, ethnic minorities, European Union, Faith in Research, family, Francesca Montemaggi, free school meals, freedom of expression, FutureFirst, general election, Gillian Raab, Global Religious Landscape, government restrictions on religion, Health and Place, homosexuality, HOPE, identity, income, Ingrid Storm, integration, Islam, Islamophobia, James Crouch, Jesus Christ, Jewish students, Journal of Contemporary Religion, labour market, Lent, life after death, Lord Ashcroft, Mark Hart, Maureen Glackin, Methodist Church, Methodist Recorder, Michael Rosato, Muslims, National Trust, National Union of Students, Natural Environment Research Council, niqab, non-religion, Northern Ireland, Opinium Research, Oven Pride, Paul Boyle, Paul Nuttall, Peter Brierley, Pew Research Center, politicians, Priya Minhas, Religious Affiliation, religious dress, religious festivals, religious freedom, religious nones, religious views, Research Councils UK, Resurrection, Roman Catholic schools, Sadek Hamid, Scotland, Scottish Affairs, Scottish church census, Scottish Social Attitudes Surveys, sectarian disadvantage, secularization, sin, Stephen Bullivant, Steve Bruce, Syrian refugees, The Observer, The Times, Theresa May, Tim Farron, toleration, Tony Glendinning, transmission of faith, Trevor Phillips, United Kingdom Independence Party, voting, YouGov, youth
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Muslim Stories and Other News
Yearbook of Muslims in Europe One important international reference work which BRIN has hitherto failed to mention in our regular round-ups of British religious statistical news is Yearbook of Muslims in Europe (ISSN 1877-1432), published by Brill since 2009 … Continue reading
Posted in church attendance, News from religious organisations, Religion and Politics, Religion and Social Capital, Religious Census, Religious prejudice, Survey news
Tagged bonding social capital, census of population, Censuswide, Church of England, David Cameron, David Lankshear, David Voas, Demos, Diocese of Southwark, foreign travel, grandchildren, grandparents, Huffington Post UK, Iraq, ISIS, Islamic countries, Islamic State, James Lewis, Jews, Jonathan Birdwell, Jorgen Nielsen, Journal of Beliefs and Values, Journal of Contemporary Religion, labour market, Leslie Francis, Libya, Louis Reynolds, madrassas, Muslims, Newman Demographic Survey, Pastoral Research Centre, Peter Collins, prayer, Religious Affiliation, religious nones, Roman Catholic Church, Scotland, Scottish Gaelic, supplementary religious schools, Survation, Syria, Tania ap Sion, Travelzoo, Tunisia, World Jewish Relief, Yearbook of Muslims in Europe, YouGov, YouGov@Cambridge
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Welfare Reform and Other News
Welfare reform (1) Recent attacks by church leaders from several denominations on the Coalition Government’s welfare and benefits reform programme seem to be giving the British public pause for thought, according to a YouGov poll for today’s edition of The … Continue reading
Posted in Historical studies, Religion and Ethnicity, Religion and Politics, Religion in public debate, Survey news
Tagged Anthony Heath, benefits, British Election Study Ethnic Minority Survey, British Market Research Bureau, church leaders, Citizenship Survey, ComRes, David Voas, EMBES, Ethnic and Racial Studies, ethnic minorities, friends, generational change, government, Immigration, integration, labour market, Lucinda Platt, Neli Demireva, Raya Muttarak, secularization, seven deadly sins, Sin Yi Cheung, Siobhan McAndrew, Sunday Times, Theos, TNS-BMRB, welfare reform, YouGov
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