Religion, Youth and Sexuality

‘Sex and religion are generally considered uncomfortable bedfellows.’ So begins a new 24-page report which offers fascinating insights into the diversity of interactions between religion and sexuality among the young.

Authored by Andrew Kam-Tuck Yip (University of Nottingham), Michael Keenan (Nottingham Trent University) and Sarah-Jane Page (Durham University), the document can be downloaded from:

http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/sociology/pdfs/rys-research-report.pdf

Entitled Religion, Youth and Sexuality: Selected Key Findings from a Multi-Faith Exploration, it represents the first published output from a 26-month project funded by the Religion and Society Programme of the Arts and Humanities Research Council and the Economic and Social Research Council between January 2009 and February 2011.

A full-length book from the project, by the same authors, and provisionally entitled Religious and Sexual Journeys: A Multi-Faith Exploration of Young Believers, will follow from Ashgate next year.

The research was undertaken among 693 young people aged 18-25 living in the UK and who were Buddhists, Christians (the majority, 57%), Hindus, Jews, Muslims or Sikhs and of varying sexualities. 82% were British citizens. 65% were white. 72% were students. 66% were women. 66% were single.

Information was gathered in three stages. All 693 participants completed an online questionnaire between May 2009 and June 2010. Some were then selected for further investigation in stages 2 and 3. These involved, respectively, face-to-face interviews with 61 participants between November 2009 and June 2010; and video diaries recorded by 24 participants over seven days between February and November 2010.

The report contains both quantitative and qualitative data. In considering the former, however, BRIN users should bear in mind that, for reasons which are not fully explained in the report (but which must doubtless include cost and the sensitive nature of the subject matter), it was not possible to select respondents according to recognized random or quota sampling methods.

Therefore, it remains an open question just how statistically representative the findings may be. From this perspective, it is worth quoting in full the section of the report which describes methodology:

‘The participants were recruited in diverse ways. Primarily, the research team sent publicity posters, postcards and e-mails to a wide variety of groups such as those working with religious young adults, sexual health organisations, support groups for sexual minorities, cultural associations and university religious and non-religious student groups.’

‘The team also used various personal networks and asked participants to refer others to the project. A website and a Facebook page were also established to publicise the project. Further, advertisements were placed in printed and online media.’

That said, here is a selection of numerical headlines from the report:

RELIGION

  • 78% felt their faith made them a better person
  • 42% said their faith was the greatest influence over how they lived their life
  • 70% said they made decisions in their everyday life with reference to their religion
  • 67% did not believe that being religious made their everyday life more difficult
  • 74% considered religion gave them a connection to their community
  • 48% regarded themselves as religious liberals and 25% as conservatives
  • 65% were involved in a religious community
  • 57% attended a religious service at least once a week
  • 55% reported the majority of their friends were religious
  • 65% agreed religion was a force for good in the world
  • 69% agreed their religion is negatively portrayed in the media
  • 69% (75% of Christians) considered religious people are stigmatized in Britain
  • 40% had hidden their religious identity from others
  • 63% agreed their religion emphasized equality of the sexes
  • 73% (56% of Muslims) disagreed that religious authority figures should be male

SEXUALITY

  • 70% agreed their religious faith shaped their sexual attitudes
  • 63% agreed their religious faith shaped their sexual practices
  • 74% defined themselves as heterosexual, 10% as homosexual and 8% as bisexual
  • 43% were sexually active, ranging from 77% for Buddhists to 20% for Muslims
  • 65% agreed consenting adults should be free to express their sexuality as they wish
  • 58% agreed casual sex is detrimental to personal well-being
  • 30% regarded celibacy as fulfilling to sexual health
  • 58% agreed that ideally sex should only occur within marriage, but …
  • 57% thought sex could be fulfilling outside marriage, if in a loving context
  • 83% agreed monogamy should be the ideal for a partnered relationship, but …
  • 35% felt that, while ideal, monogamy in a partnered relationship is difficult to achieve
  • 58% said heterosexuality and homosexuality should be treated on equal terms, but …
  • 52% regarded heterosexuality as the ideal
  • 55% (76% of Buddhists, 22% of Sikhs) agreed their religion was positive towards sexuality
  • 56% thought their religion opposed any sexuality other than heterosexuality
  • 51% agreed their religious leaders were knowledgeable about sexuality
  • 76% agreed there is too much focus on sex in the media
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Poppy-Burning

82% of the public support the prosecution of Emdadur Choudhury, the Muslims against Crusades (MAC) protestor who was this week convicted at Woolwich Crown Court of a public order offence for his ‘calculated and deliberate’ insult to Britain’s war dead by burning two large plastic poppies near the Royal Albert Hall on 11 November 2010.

That is the finding of a YouGov poll conducted online on 8 and 9 March among a representative sample of 2,436 British adults aged 18 and over. The data table is available at:

http://today.yougov.co.uk/sites/today.yougov.co.uk/files/YG-Archives-YG-PoppyBurning-090311.pdf

The proportion in favour of Choudhury’s prosecution peaked at 90% among Conservative voters and 91% of the over-60s. Critics of the prosecution averaged 10% but stood at 14% for Liberal Democrats and 13% for Londoners. 9% expressed no opinion.

YouGov did not ask any questions about the size of the fine imposed on Choudhury, just £50, nor about his apparent lack of remorse for the incident, both matters which have been the subject of negative coverage in the media. Another member of MAC, Mohammad Haque, was acquitted over his part in the same demonstration.

Thinking about protests more generally, 67% of YouGov’s sample said that it was unacceptable for extremists to make offensive or provocative protests that risk inflaming racial and religious tensions, and that it was appropriate for them to be prosecuted. 25% upheld the right to peaceful protest even if the views were extreme and liable to offend.

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Census Snippets

Combined household and individual questionnaires for the 2011 population census have been dropping on doormats all week in preparation for the official enumeration date of Sunday, 27 March. They can be completed on paper or online.

This will be the twenty-first decennial census in Britain since 1801 (none was held in 1941, on account of the Second World War). It may also be the last in the present form, since Government is investigating cheaper and faster options for collecting data in future.

Anybody interested in learning more about the history of the census in Britain may like to view a current exhibition at The British Library’s Folio Society Gallery. Entitled Census and Society: Why Everyone Counts, it runs until 29 May.

As in 2001, when it was first introduced, this year’s census will include a voluntary question on religious affiliation. Prior to that, the only other official census of religion in mainland Britain in modern times had been of church accommodation and attendance, in 1851.

The question in England and Wales (individual question 20) in 2011 reads: ‘What is your religion?’ The options given are: no religion, Christian, Buddhist, Hindu, Jewish, Muslim, Sikh, and any other religion (write in).

Anybody wishing to specify that they are agnostic, atheist or humanist is asked to select the ‘any other religion’ category and to elaborate in the space provided.

Any Christian wishing to identify that they belong to a particular denomination is also advised to tick ‘any other religion’ and to write in their denomination.

The question in Scotland (individual question 13) reads: ‘What religion, religious denomination or body do you belong to?’ The options given are: none, Church of Scotland, Roman Catholic, other Christian (write in), Muslim, Buddhist, Sikh, Jewish, Hindu, and another religion (write in).

Nationwide advice is provided by Government to those worried that their child is too young to identify with a particular religion. This is either to select ‘no religion’ or to leave the question blank.

There has been a certain amount of controversy and advocacy surrounding the religion question, and the primary purpose of this post is to provide a selective round-up of some of the stories which have been in the news.

We have already reported – http://www.brin.ac.uk/news/?p=678 – that the British Humanist Association (BHA) launched a campaign on 27 October last to persuade the non-religious to register as such in the census.

The BHA has been concerned that the somewhat leading wording of the census question, coupled with a lingering habit of using religion as a cultural identifier, resulted in inflating the numbers of genuinely religious people in 2001.

The BHA’s initial strategy was to try and persuade the Office for National Statistics (ONS) to rephrase the question. Rebuffed in this attempt (although ONS did agree to offer guidance after the census on the ways in which data should and should not be used), the BHA shifted tactics.

The BHA has been using local leafleting, advertising and online communications with the somewhat tongue-in-cheek campaign slogan of: ‘If you’re not religious, for God’s sake say so’.

However, the BHA has recently been told that posters bearing this or similar slogans are likely to cause widespread and serious offence, to vociferous BHA protests of censorship and, implicitly, reintroduction of the (repealed) blasphemy laws by the back door.

Companies owning advertising space at railway stations have refused to display three different BHA census posters, following this advice to BHA from the Advertising Standards Authority’s Committee of Advertising Practice (CAP).

CAP obviously had at the back of its mind the complaints generated by a previous BHA poster campaign, in 2009, which asserted: ‘There is probably no god, now stop worrying and enjoy your life’.

CAP’s recommendation has likewise affected the BHA census posters being displayed on 200 buses in London and six other cities. They have had to be reworded to read: ‘Not religious? In this year’s census, say so.’

The Pagan Federation has also issued a press notice proclaiming that ‘Pagans are standing up to be counted and coming out of the broom closet for census day’. They are being encouraged to write in their affiliation (the Federation having not prevailed on ONS to include a specific box for Pagans).

The Federation is arguing that the 42,000 individuals who registered as Pagans in 2001 were ‘only the tip of the iceberg’, citing research by Professor Ronald Hutton indicating that there were actually around 250,000 Pagans in the country in that year.

The Foundation for Holistic Spirituality, based in Glastonbury, is pursuing a different line. It is urging people to write in ‘holistic’ at the census, as ‘shorthand for an openhearted, open-minded approach that includes all spiritual paths. It recognises that everything is connected and celebrates diversity.’ This represents ‘a third way beyond traditional faiths and secularism’.

Christian coverage of the census has partly been a response to the BHA’s activities. For instance, writing in the Church Times for 4 March, Paul Vallely, Associate Editor of The Independent, defended the status quo of the census approach in the face of the ‘fundamentalism’ of the ‘new atheists’.

The census, Vallely continued, allows people to define themselves religiously as they feel comfortable with. ‘Religious belief, behaviour, and identity are not necessarily connected’, he added.

In his Daily Telegraph blog for 27 February, George Pitcher also weighed in against the BHA and in defence of people’s right to self-identify as ‘cultural Christians’ and to rejoice in living in a ‘Christian country’.

‘It isn’t religious people who want to control the way that people think’, wrote Pitcher. ‘It looks to me like some secularists are growing ever more desperate to seize that control.’

In a press statement on 4 March, Theos, the public theology think tank, criticized the BHA’s census campaign as ‘misconceived and unnecessary’, while also paying tribute to BHA for doing ‘a good job of keeping religion in the news’ overall.

Theos argued that BHA’s census campaign ‘grossly exaggerates the extent to which the religious affiliation results of the 2001 census have shaped government policy or influenced spending decisions’.

Theos pointed out that ‘no religion’ is the first option in the census question and ‘this means that people have ample opportunity to deny religious affiliation should they wish to …’

‘If the Archbishop of Canterbury were to launch a campaign pleading for people to tick the Christian box, it would be rightly ridiculed as a sign of desperation’, Theos concluded.

The Theos statement provided the backbone for a lengthy article about the census in the Methodist Recorder for 10 March. This also quoted spokespersons for the Methodist Church as ‘welcoming’ the debate on the census question for providing ‘an opportunity to discuss the nature of faith and religion in contemporary society’, especially beyond the context of conventional Sunday worship (such as through Fresh Expressions).

Otherwise, comment on the census in the Christian media has been limited, although the Church of England Newspaper for 25 February included an article headlined ‘religious question to feature in the census’. By way of introduction, it jocularly reminded the readership that ‘King David was famously punished for counting the people of Israel …’

Meanwhile, the Roman Catholic weekly The Universe for 6 March majored on the hopes of the Federation of Irish Societies that Catholic churches would actively engage with its campaign to get Irish people resident in Britain to register as ethnic Irish at the census. In 2001, 10% of first-generation and 91% of second-generation Irish failed to do so.

The Muslim Council of Britain, which was very supportive of the inclusion of a religion question in 2001, has so far not issued a press release on the 2011 census. An article in the Muslim Weekly for 25 February focused on the need for Pakistani business owners to ensure that their employees knew the postcode of their place of work in order to complete the census form.

The main preoccupation of the Sikh community has been to get ONS to agree to include Sikh as an explicit ethnic as well as religious category (and to do the same for Jews). They have not succeeded in doing so, despite the threat last year of legal action by the Sikh Channel and Sikh Federation against ONS.

The Network of Buddhist Organisations is running a ‘Tick the Box for Buddhism’ campaign in connection with the census. This has a Facebook presence and is advertising in Big Issue.

The Network would actually prefer there to be no religion question in the census, on account of its methodological imperfections. However, given its inclusion, and the influence it is likely to have on Government policy, the Network wants to see ‘more accurate figures for Buddhism’ than it feels were achieved in 2001.

The Board of Deputies of British Jews is encouraging all members of the Jewish community to identify themselves as such in the census. It has created a special census webpage and email box and issued a full set of online frequently asked questions (FAQs).

One of the more interesting is: ‘I’m not religious – should I still tick the “Jewish” box?’ The answer given is: ‘It doesn’t matter whether you are religious or not – if you consider yourself to be Jewish, you should tick the “Jewish” box. If you really don’t feel comfortable doing that, you can still specify “Jewish” for your ethnic group. There is no “Jewish” tick box, so you will need to write it on the form, but it will still be counted.’

In an article in the Jewish Chronicle for 25 February, David Graham, Director of Social and Demographic Research at the Institute for Jewish Policy Research, spelled out various policy and practical reasons why Jews should self-identify at the census.

A separate report in the same issue highlighted the efforts of leaders of Orthodox Jewry to ensure their movement participated more fully in the census, following the apparent undercount of the Charedi population in 2001.

This is attributed in part to the fact that Charedis tend to have large families, and that the standard household schedule only has space to accommodate details of six persons, necessitating them to ask for an additional form.

Another potential cause of Jewish underenumeration is flagged up in the Church of England Newspaper for 11 March: ‘there are signs that some Jews are reluctant to identify their faith on the census form in case details are leaked to anti-Semitic groups’.

One of the more surprising (and misleading) outcomes of the 2001 census was the success of the internet campaign beforehand to get people to register as Jedi Knights of Star Wars fame.

Some 390,000 individuals did so, making the Jedis the fifth largest religious body in the country (counting those with no religion as a body). There is a Facebook group to Put Jedi as your Religion in the UK 2011 Census.

The Sunday Times of 27 February reported some support to get ‘Dudeism’ recognized as a religion (named after the character The Dude, played by Jeff Bridges, from the 1998 comedy film The Big Lebowski).

There is a Facebook group called Dudeism for the 2011 Census, dedicated to the Church of the Latter-Day Dude. Another Facebook group is Heavy Metal for the 2011 Census, which has some 35,000 members, all determined to put heavy metal on Britain’s religious map.

Those of us with an objective interest in religious data will naturally hope that the integrity of the 2011 census will not be compromised unduly by too many ‘jokey’ endeavours.

To counteract the tendency, ONS has been utilizing social media, including Facebook, and YouTube, the video site, to make young people aware of the importance of filling out the census forms sensibly.

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Attitudes towards Britain’s Involvement in the Afghanistan Conflict by Religious Affiliation

by Ben Clements

As well as looking at behaviour and attitudes in relation to the 2010 general election (participation, method of voting, party voted for, etc.), the EMBES survey contains a wealth of attitudinal data relating to long-standing or more recent political issues in Britain. One of these is the involvement of British military forces in the conflict in Afghanistan, which has been on-going since late-2001.

It clearly represents one of major foreign policy issues of recent times, even though it was never as politically controversial, both here and on the international stage, as was the invasion of Iraq in 2003, which engendered divisions with and between the political parties and in wider society. This post reports attitudes towards Britain’s involvement in the Afghanistan war by religious affiliation. It can be read in conjunction with this previous research note on attitudes towards the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan by religious affiliation, using data from the British Election Study 2009/10 internet panel survey, which sampled the wider British population.

As with my previous posts this week covering the EMBES (see here and here), the data reported below are based on questions answered as part of the self-completion section (involving 2,787 respondents overall). The EMBES carried seven questions relating to various aspects of Britain’s participation in the war in Afghanistan, one of which is not included here since it asked explicitly about current perceptions of how the war was going. One question asks about approval or disapproval of Britain’s role in the conflict (Table 1) and another about the longer-term prospects of defeating the Taliban (Table 2). The remaining four questions comprise a battery of related items (shown in Tables 3-6). These ask about positive and negative aspects of the conflict.

Table 1 also has two subsidiary tables: Table 1a, which provides responses by Christian denomination; and Table 1b, which gives responses by Muslin tradition. Question wording is provided under each table. To aid presentation of the data in tabular format, the original response options have been collapsed into broader categories (not applicable for Table 3).

Please note that percentages are based on weighted data and sum down each column (except for Table 1a, which sums across the rows). The final column in each table provides the unweighted number of cases. Table 2 provides weighted mean scores for a question using a scale ranging from 0 through to 10 (unweighted cases are reported in the bottom row). As before, the religious affiliation categories are: No religion, Christian, Hindu, Muslim, Sikh and Other. This represents a minor modification of the religious affiliation variable available in the EMBES dataset. The religious affiliation categories are based on two EMBES questions:

‘Do you regard yourself as belonging to any particular religion?’

IF YES:

‘Which one?’

Tables 1a and 1b are based on follow-up questions asking about the particular denomination or tradition belonged to if a respondent says that they are Christian or Muslim. Some interesting differences in opinion are noted below.

Tables 1, 1a and 1b
There are clear differences in levels of approval and disapproval of Britain’s involvement in Afghanistan by religious affiliation, as shown in Table 1. Muslims are least likely to approve (7.6 per cent), with Hindus and Sikhs showing the higher levels of support (26.5 per cent for both groups). Muslims show the highest level of disapproval (at 63.1 per cent) followed by those of no religion (at 51.9 per cent). Also, note that the categories vary somewhat in the proportions offering no opinion (from 8 per cent for those of no religion to nearly a fifth of Hindus).

Table 1a, showing responses by Christian denomination, shows the highest levels of approval are expressed by Anglicans, members of Pentecostal churches and those in the ‘other’ Christian category (in the 25-30 per cent range). The highest levels of disapproval reach around 60 per cent, expressed by Orthodox Christians and (Seventh Day) Adventists. Note that the Orthodox category consists of very few cases. Again, the proportions offering no opinion vary across the categories (from 5 per cent to over 18 per cent).

In Table 1b, showing responses by Muslim tradition, Sunni Muslims and those who do not belong to a particular tradition express the highest levels of disapproval (around 64-5 per cent) compared to 44 per cent for Shi’a Muslims and 50 per cent for those belonging to other traditions. The vast majority of Muslims in Afghanistan practice Sunni Islam. Note that the Shi’a and ‘other’ categories are both based on relatively small numbers of respondents. In the EMBES survey, 83.4 per cent of those who said they were Muslim reported belonging to the Sunni tradition in the follow-up question.

 

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Embes-Afghan-2

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Table 2
The question on which the figures in Table 2 are based asked about longer-term assessment of whether the Taliban in Afghanistan can be defeated. Responses were provided using a 0 to 10 scale in the EMBES survey questionnaire, where a score of 0 represents the most pessimistic evaluation and a score of 10 would indicate the most optimistic evaluation. In the EMBES dataset, the scale ranges from 1 to 11; so in Table 2, a score of 1 represents the most pessimistic evaluation, and a score of 11 the most optimistic assessment. There are differences in the mean scores by religious affiliation category. Interestingly, those of no religion are most pessimistic of defeating the Taliban over the longer-term (mean score of 3.8), followed by Muslims (mean score of 4.1). Those most optimistic in relative terms are Hindus (at 5.5), followed by Christians (4.8). Sikhs and those in the ‘other’ category share a mean score of 4.6. Standard deviations are provided as well.

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Tables 3-6
Tables 3 to 6 report attitudes towards a related series of questions, two of which asked about positive aspects of Britain’s participation in the war in Afghanistan (Tables 3 and 5), and two of which asked about negative implications of Britain’s involvement (Tables 4 and 6). The general picture is that, across categories, respondents are more likely to disagree with the positive aspects and more likely to agree with the negative implications. Again, however, there are clear differences in views by religious affiliation categories.

In Table 3, Muslims and those belonging to other traditions are least likely to agree that Britain will benefit in the long term from its involvement (at 9.4 per cent in both cases). For all other categories, nearly a fifth of respondents express agreement with this question. In Table 4, it is Christians and Sikhs who are most likely to agree that Britain’s involvement threatens their safety and that of their families. In Table 5, Hindus and Sikhs are most likely to concur that is a moral case for British involvement in Afghanistan, with Muslims least likely to express agreement with this statement (just 15.2 per cent). In Table 6, there were high levels of agreement with the statement about the war seriously damaging British interests around the globe. Majorities of Muslims, Sikhs and those of another religion agreed. Apart from members of some other religion, less than a fifth in each category disagreed. Across Tables 3-6 there is considerable variation in the proportions in each category refusing to answer or offering a ‘don’t know’ response (combined rather than shown separately). The highest proportions tend to be found amongst Muslims and Hindus (usually in the range of 20-25 per cent).

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Finally, BRIN readers who are interested more generally in looking at public opinion in Britain and elsewhere towards the war in Afghanistan are directed towards the links for relevant data held by the following opinion poll organisations:

Angus Reid data

Gallup

Ipsos MORI

YouGov data

Dr Ben Clements
Department of Politics and International Relations, University of Leicester

bc101 @ leicester.ac.uk

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Lent

It will be Ash Wednesday on 9 March, the first day of Lent in the Christian calendar, the forty-day period of fasting and penance leading up to Easter, and replicating Jesus Christ’s sacrifice and withdrawal into the desert prior to his crucifixion.

The official observance of Lent has been somewhat relaxed by the Christian Churches during the later twentieth century, but the popular tradition of giving something up for Lent is apparently far from extinguished.

This rather surprising resilience of Lenten abstinence is seemingly confirmed in a newly-released YouGov poll, conducted online between 25 and 28 February 2011 among 2,055 Britons aged 18 and over. The data tables will be found at:

http://today.yougov.co.uk/sites/today.yougov.co.uk/files/YG-Archives-Pol-YouGov-Pancakes-070311_1.pdf

Although 73% of respondents were not planning to give anything up for Lent this year, the inference is that the other 27% intended to forego something.

Abstainers were particularly likely to be found among adults with children in the household (32%), residents of the Midlands (32%), women (31%), and Londoners (31%).

Least abstemious were the Scots, only 21% of whom were going to give something up, followed by the Welsh (23%), men (24%), and the over-55s (24%).

YouGov provided no breakdown by religious affiliation, but a survey of professing Roman Catholics by nfp Synergy in 2008 revealed that 31% had given up something for Lent.

Comparative statistics (chronologically) are not easy to come by. However, an abstinence rate of 27% is certainly high in relation to previous Gallup studies: 12% in 1939, 8% in 1993 and 9% in 1996.

A survey for Abbey National in 2002 suggested that one-third expected to forsake a treat during Lent, but the sample was small (only 200 people) and confined to adults aged 18-50.

Were YouGov’s respondents simply being over ‘optimistic’ about their intentions?

Were they drawn into exaggeration by the wording of the question, which some might regard as ‘leading’?

Were they confusing Lenten sacrifice with the personal austerity and belt-tightening now necessary because of the poor state of the economy and public expenditure cuts?

Or is there a genuine revival of Lenten observance, even though most other religious indicators are moving downwards or, occasionally, stabilizing?

Another equally curious and unexpected discovery comes from a survey by Somerfield in 2007 in which 70% of adults chose, from a preset list of options, the answer that Lent commemorated the time which Jesus spent in the wilderness.

Chocolate topped YouGov’s list of proposed sacrifices in 2011 (8%). Then came junk food (7%), sweets (6%), alcohol (6%), smoking (3%), fizzy drinks (3%), swearing (3%), coffee (2%), sugar (2%), tea (1%), all caffeine (1%), and meat (1%). Multiple answers were evidently possible.

Few of these choices reached double figures. 10% of Londoners and adults with children in the household aspired to give up junk food for Lent, but otherwise all the highs were for chocolate, mentioned by 12% of Midlanders, 11% of women, and 10% of those aged 25-34.

Chocolates and sweets topped the list of Lenten sacrifices in the earlier Gallup polls. Meat was a significant forfeit in 1939, but is much less so now.

Ash Wednesday is preceded by Shrove Tuesday, traditionally Pancake Day. 49% of YouGov’s interviewees expected to eat pancakes on that day, and a further 32% said that they might do so.

Pancake refuseniks numbered 19%, including 2% who claimed never to eat pancakes. The proportion was highest among Scots (31%) and then among men and Londoners (25% each).

Of those definitely planning to tuck into pancakes, most were going to indulge on a grand scale. Just 3% thought they would be content with one pancake. 31% had two pancakes in mind, 31% three, 24% four or five, and 9% six or more.

Lemon and sugar was the favourite pancake topping or filling for 65%, followed by maple syrup (27%). 64% preferred sweet pancakes to savoury ones, 10% liked savoury better, and 21% enjoyed both types.

Chapter 16 in Ronald Hutton’s The Stations of the Sun (Oxford University Press, 1996) summarizes the social history of Lent in Britain. The only study of the limited survey evidence is Clive Field, ‘Who’s for Lent?’, Quadrant, March 1998, pp. 2-3.

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“Other – Write In”

by Siobhan McAndrew and Ben Clements.

 

Wordle for written-in text

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The British Election Study 2009-2010 is a valuable resource for political scientists. What researchers in religion may not realise is that the questions on religious affiliation can tell us something about how people define themselves, and to a certain extent, about the comparative size of new religious movements, sects, and smaller religions. The Internet Panel sample comprised 16816 respondents giving more ability than in smaller surveys to look at smaller faith communities.

Large government-sponsored surveys tend to offer limited options when asking religious affiliation. For example, the Integrated Household Survey does not distinguish between different denominations of Christianity. For both the IHS and the Census, it is thought that many respondents identify themselves as Christian because they want to distinguish themselves from other religious and ethnic identities, even though they may never attend church or think of themselves as belonging to a particular congregation or denomination. The British Social Attitudes survey does ask people about their denomination, after screening out those who say they do not belong to a religion. However the sample size tends to be too small to capture smaller communities in sufficient detail for further analysis. Even the Baptists, a historic Christian denomination, only fielded 33 of 4486 respondents in 2008.

In addition, BSA respondents are categorised in ways which are designed to be consistent over time. However, the categories of ‘Christian – Non-Denominational’ and ‘Other Religion’ obscure the diversity which seems likely to exist within these groups. The non-denominational Christian group is likely to be a blend of cultural or nominal Christians as well as members of independent, non-denominational Churches. In the English Church Census, these were described as ‘New Churches’. Some of these may self-define as evangelical, and others not; either way, the religiosity of the ‘new church’ Christians is likely to be very different to that of the nominal Christians, who a generation earlier may have defined as Anglican.

The 2001 Census offered an opportunity to investigate the smaller communities in more depth, but a question on denomination along the lines of the Northern Ireland census was rejected. In Scotland, people were asked if they were Church of Scotland, Roman Catholic or ‘other Christian’, which allowed finer detail. Nevertheless, many Census respondents took the opportunity to ‘write in’ their responses. The denominational codes used in Northern Ireland were adapted and the written in responses aggregated as illustrated in the following Census table (see worksheet 5).

One issue was that a sizeable proportion misunderstood or did not follow the response options as specified, so that some wrote in that they were Catholic, Methodist, etc., as if these were other than Christian. The tendency to write in a response probably varied across smaller religions too: some groups mobilised their adherents to write in a particular response whereas others did not.

This brings us on to the written-in section of the BES, specifically the Internet Panel sample. Like the BSA, a screening question is asked first.

Do you regard yourself as belonging to any particular religion?

1. Yes; 2. No; 3. Not sure/Don’t know

Which religion or denomination?
1. Church of England/Anglican/Episcopal; 2. Roman Catholic; 3. Presbyterian/Church of Scotland; 4. Methodist; 5. Baptist; 6. United Reformed Church; 7. Free Presbyterian; 8. Brethren; 9. Jewish; 10. Hindu; 11. Islam/Muslim; 12. Sikh; 13. Buddhist; 14. Other.

Faith community Unweighted base % weighted sample
Anglican 4227 24.5
Roman Catholic 1326 7.7
Presbyterian 441 2.3
Methodist 375 2.1
Baptist 245 1.4
United Reformed Church 81 0.4
Brethren 18 0.1
Free Presbyterian 16 0.1
Jewish 165 0.9
Hindu 62 0.4
Muslim 110 0.8
Sikh 14 0.1
Buddhist 46 0.2
Other 525 3.0
Total adherents 7651 44.0
No religion 9165 56.0
Total 16816 100.0

Note that the table above gives the unweighted number of respondents in the sample which selected each faith community category in the middle column. However, the percentage figures have had a sample weight (W8_F) applied to the entire group of respondents contacted for the survey before the 2010 electoral campaign. (Weights are used to adjust survey samples for differing probabilities of being selected, for differential non-response among different demographic groups, and to adjust the sampled distribution for key variables such as sex, age, and ethnicity to conform to a known population distribution. Otherwise, estimates of the prevalence of different groups in the population are potentially misleading.)

For the 525 choosing “other”:
You said you belong to an ‘other’ religion or denomination. Please say what this is [written into open text box].

This allowed people to clarify their religious identity. We categorised the responses into the following categories:

Faith community Unweighted base Weighted % of all “Religion – Other”
Non-denominational Christian 125 20.05
Pagans 66 12.36
Spiritualist 38 7.56
Evangelical Christian 35 7.32
Pentecostalist 38 7.30
Salvation Army 22 7.17
Latter-Day Saints/Mormon 29 6.11
Won’t say 20 3.75
Christian Other (free churches, Lutheran, Church of Sweden etc) 20 3.59
Unreligious inc. Jedi 15 3.44
Jehovah’s Witness 13 2.57
Society of Friends/Quaker 15 2.51
Other 10 2.44
Orthodox (unspecified) 12 2.07
Greek Orthodox 9 2.06
Other World Religion 8 1.72
Other New Religious Movements 11 1.65
Welsh Congregationalist/Independent 8 1.18
Humanist/Free Thinker 5 1.02
Presbyterian/Church of Scotland 4 0.75
Anglican 5 0.75
Unitarian 5 0.73
Christian Related (Christian Science, Christadelphian) 4 0.71
Mixed (e.g. “Buddhist Christian”) 3 0.59
Seventh-Day Adventist 3 0.42
“Spiritual generally” 2 0.32
Total 525 100.00

We could write at length about the ‘Other’ group, but here are some key points. First, 3% looks small, but compares with 0.28% identifying as ‘other’ in Great Britain in the 2001 Census. This may be because the ‘other’ group here includes non-mainline Christians whereas the ‘other’ group in the Census was designed to capture members of other non-Christian religions specifically (religions apart from Buddhism, Hinduism, Sikhism, Islam, and Judaism).

Secondly, some respondents appear to have simply made mistakes (e.g. those identifying as Anglican), partly perhaps because the online form doesn’t allow a return to previous screens. Occasionally, however, people want to clarify that their affiliation is complex, for example because they do not practise or believe a certain aspect of the faith.

Thirdly, it’s interesting to note that the majority of those identifying with what we have categorised as new religious movements are Pagan, rather than following more esoteric or recently-established movements (there were only two Scientologists among the respondents, for example). The Pagan Federation has been active in campaigning for those following the various “Pagan pathways” as “Pagan” in official and other surveys. Looking at the unweighted bases and the weighted percentages, Pagans (66 respondents, 0.36% of weighted sample) appears to be about as prevalent as Buddhists (46, 0.24%) – although of course these are very small numbers and percentages, and a degree of sampling error is likely.

Fourthly, it is interesting to note how many Christians exist outside the traditional Anglican, Roman Catholic, Presbyterian, Methodist, URC, Baptist and Brethren categories. 35 respondents identified themselves as “evangelical” and 125 as non-denominational Christians (using a variety of appellations). While consistency of categorisation is obviously helpful when comparing groups over time, there may be a need to re-categorise when some groups are vanishingly small and newer identities are growing but simply grouped as “Christian-Other”.

A final point is that a number of the written-in responses have involved people choosing from different philosophies in highly individual ways; in some cases the space to type in a response allows a modicum of self-expression. Examples include:

– A respondent identifying as Mexica – perhaps as a member of the Nahuatl/Mexica, and perhaps following indigenous religion in the form of “modern Nahuaism”. After some thought, we categorised this as a New Religious Movement analogous to Paganism.
– A respondent who identifies as a member of the “Oreder of the Jedi”.
– A Discordian respondent.
– A respondent who typed, ‘Lapsed Anglican (they don’t want me!)’.
– A respondent who identifies with ‘Spititualism ( This is a government recognised religion, so can you tell me why it is not included on your list of Religions please, ) Thank you !!’.
– A respondent who wrote, ‘every night i pray to Jesus, Mary and God but dont read the bible or go to church’.
– And members of the national British philosophy ‘Mind your own business’, also written in as ‘none of your business’, ‘not going to divulge’, ‘nothing to do with any body but me’, and ‘private’.

The set of written-in answers is given in full below, in alphabetical order. They have also been used to create the Wordle at the head of this post (where more than one respondent wrote in the same affiliation, we repeated the text pro rata). The BES dataset lists exactly what was typed, so that different spellings (and capitalisations) are listed and aggregated separately.

Siobhan McAndrew
Institute for Social Change, University of Manchester
siobhan.mcandrew @ manchester.ac.uk

Ben Clements
Department of Politics and International Relations, University of Leicester
bc101 @ leicester.ac.uk

. [a full-stop – we categorised this as “won’t say”]
“DIY” religion (having an Inner Faith but being ritual-averse and regimentation-averse) – a Quaker/Shaker/Goddess-Centred/Christ’s Teachings Follower.
Abstain
aetheist
aethist
Anarchist
annibynwr
annibynwyr
AOG (Pentecostal)
Asatru
Assemblies of God
Bahai
Born again
Born again christian
Born again Christian
Born Again Christian
Brahma Kumaris
Buddhist christian
celtic pagan
Celtic Pagan
charasmatic christian
Charismatic Christian – New Frontiers
Christadelphian
Christian- Evangelical, Charismatic
Christian – Global Worship Centre
christian – no denomination
Christian – no denomination
Christian – non denominational
Christian – Salvation Army
Christian – you have given denominations, not religions
christian
Christian
CHRISTIAN
Christian (ie no strong perference for any denomination)
Christian (no denomination)
Christian (non-denominational)
Christian (non denominational)
Christian /Lutheran
Christian although I worship in C of E
christian buddhist
Christian but no particular denomination
christian but no specific denomination
Christian evangelical
Christian evangelical / free church
Christian faith not religion
christian fellowship
Christian Free Church
Christian Jehovah’s Witness
christian new frontiers
christian non-denomination
Christian non-denominational
Christian Non-Denominational
Christian not of a denomination
Christian Orthodox
Christian Other
Christian Science
christian scientist
christian spiritualist
Christian spiritualist
Christian Spiritualist
Christian, no denomination
christian, other denomination
christian, unbaptised Jehovahs witness
Christian, without denomination
Christian,no denomination
Christian/Buddist
CHRISTIANITY
Christianity but no specific denomination
christion
church in wales
Church in Wales
Church of Christ
Church of CHrist
Church of England
Church of God
Church of God the Creator
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormon)
cHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS
Church of Jesus Christ of latter day saints
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints
Church of Scotland
CHURCH OF SCOTLAND
Church of Sweden
Church of Wales
Church Of Wales
congregational
Congregational
coptic orthodox
Deist
Discordian
dk
do not wish to
Druid
Druid (Pagan)
Elim Pentecostal Church
evangelical
Evangelical
Evangelical born again Christian
evangelical christian
Evangelical christian
Evangelical Christian
Evangelical Free Church
Evangelical/ Pentecostal movement
evangelistic
evangical christan
evengelic
Every Nation Church
every night i pray to Jesus, Mary and God but dont read the bible or go to church
Faith – I believe in God’s Word
Fountain of Life
free christian
Free Christian
free church
free church, evangelical
free evangelical
free thinker
Fundamental Christian
general non-conformist christian
Greek Orthadox
greek orthodox
Greek Orthodox
GREEK ORTHODOX
greek orthodox Christian
Ground Level
Heathen
Hillsong My Church
House Church (Christian Charismatic)
humanist
humanist spiritualist
I am a spiritualist
I consider myself a Christian, no denomination
Independant church
Independant Evangelical Church
Independent Evangelical
Independent Evangelical Christian
Isian
jain
Jain (7th Religion in the World)
jainism
jedi
Jedi
JEDI
Jediism
jehovah’s witness
Jehovah’s Witness
jehovahs witness
Jehovahs Witness
Jehovahs Wittness
Just Christian
jw
JW
Kirati
Lapsed Anglican (they don’t want me!)
Latter-Day Saint
Latter Day Saint
LDS
Lutheran
Lutherian Evangelical
m,.knm
Mexica
Mind your own business
mormon
Mormon
my own personal interpretation of Christianity
n
n/a
N/A
na
natural
new testment christian
NO
No denomination identify as Christian
Non- denominational Christian
Non-conformist Christian
Non-denomination, Christian.
Non-denominational Christian
Non Conformist
nondenominational christian
none
none of your business
not applicable
not going to divulge
Not organised
not relevent
nothing to do with any body but me
Odinism
Odinist
Oreder of the Jedi
orthodox
Orthodox
Orthodox Christian
other christian
Other Chrsitian
Pagan – specifically wiccan & goddess
pagan
Pagan
Pagan Wiccan
Pagan, Wiccan
Pagan/wiccan
paganism
Paganism
pagen
Parsi Zorastrian
Pentacostal
Pentcostal
PENTECOASTAL
pentecost
pentecostal
Pentecostal
Pentecostal ( elim)
pentecostal christian
Pentecostal/Evengelical
penticostal
Penticostal
Penticostal Christianity
penticostian
Polytheistic Pantheonist
Prefer not to
prefer not to say
private
Protestant
Protestant Lutheran
Protestant non-conformist
Quaker – Religious Society of Friends
quaker
Quaker
quakers
red indian
Religious Society of Friends
Religious Society of Friends (Quarkers)
Religious Society of Friends, otherwise known as the Quakers
Russian orthodox
Russian Orthodox
salvation army
sALVATION ARMY
Salvation Army
Sanatan Dharma
scientology
Scientology
Seventh-Day Adventist
seventh day adventist
Seventh Day Adventist
shamanistic pagan
spiritallist
spiritaul
Spiritual
SPIRITUAL CHURCH
spiritualiist
spiritualism
Spiritualism
spiritualist
Spiritualist
SPIRITUALIST
spirituliat
spiritulist
Spiritulist
Spititualism ( This is a government recognised religion, so can you tell me why it is not included on your list of Religions please, ) Thank you !!
Survivalist/Spiritualist
Taoism
The Church of Christ of Latterday Saints
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day saints (Mormon)
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day saints. (Mormon).
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday Saints
The church of Jesus christ of lattterday saints. Christian (Mormon)
The Church of Latter-day Saints (Mormon)
The Salvation Army
The teachings of Christ
Theism
theist
Thelemite
Tradi Polytheist
True Christian
unitarian
Unitarian
Unitarian – Christian
Uniterian
Welsh Congregational
Welsh Congrigational
WELSH INDEPENDANT
Welsh Independent Church
Welsh Independent Non-Conformist
Welsh Nonconformist
wicca
Wicca
wiccan
Wiccan
Wiccan/Pagan
Zoroastrian

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The Ethnic Minority British Election Study (EMBES) – Part II

This second BRIN post reports reports various attitudes and behaviour for the May 2010 General Election by religious affiliation in a series of cross-tabulations, again using the EMBES survey.

Please note that for the tables using the religion categories, percentages sum down each column (except for Table 4a, which sums across the rows). The original religious affiliation variable on the EMBES dataset has been slightly modified. The ‘Other’ category used here combines one Jewish respondent, Buddhists (3 cases), and Other Religion (26 cases). The measures of attitudes and behaviour are the same as those looked at by ethnic group in my previous post.

To reiterate, Tables 1-5 report the weighted percentages and the unweighted number of cases. As before, the figures in this column should be kept in mind when using the percentages reported here as some categories may consist of only a small number of cases.

Table 6 reports the (weighted) mean scores for likeability ratings of the political parties. Respondents were asked to give a 0 to 10 scale by the EMBES questionnaire, where a score of 0 represents the lowest likeability, and a score of 10 would indicate the highest likeability. In the EMBES dataset, the scale ranges from 1 to 11 – so that a score of 1 represents the worst evaluation possible, and a score of 11 the highest.

Note that there are also two subsidiary tables based on follow-up questions to the religious affiliation item in the EMBES survey, which accompany Table 4. Table 4a shows vote choice in the 2010 general election by Christian tradition or denomination, while Table 4b reports vote choice in the 2010 general election by Muslim tradition.

Table 1

Table 2

Table 3

Table 4

Table 4a

Table 4b

Table 5

Table 6

 

That’s all for today from the EMBES, although I’ll be posting shortly on the ‘Other Religion – write in’ section of the main BES.

Dr Ben Clements
Department of Politics and International Relations, University of Leicester

bc101 @ leicester.ac.uk

Posted in Measuring religion, Religion and Politics, Research note | Tagged , , , , , , | 2 Comments

The Ethnic Minority British Election Study (EMBES)

This BRIN post reports various attitudes and behaviour for the May 2010 general election by ethnic group in a series of cross-tabulations, using the EMBES survey. It looks at:

1. Interest in the 2010 general election.
2. Whether voted or did not vote in the 2010 general election.
3. Method of voting in the 2010 general election.
4. Vote choice at the 2010 general election.
5. For comparison purposes, vote choice at the 2005 general election.
6. Likeability ratings of major and minor political parties.

The EMBES survey involved a post-election face-to-face survey (including a self-completion section) and a subsequent mail-back questionnaire. The data reported here is based on questions answered as part of the self-completion section. This involves 2,787 respondents in total. The geographical composition of the sample is as follows: England – 2,732 cases (98 per cent); Scotland – 39 cases (1.4 per cent); Wales – 16 cases (0.6 per cent).

In Tables 1-5 all percentages are weighted. The percentages in each table sum across the rows. The final column in Tables 1-5 gives the unweighted number of cases for each ethnic group category. The figures in this column should be kept in mind when using the percentages reported here as some ethnic group categories consist of a small or very small number of cases.

Table 6 reports the (weighted) mean scores for likeability ratings of the political parties. For the benefit of BRIN users, the categories have been reproduced as they appear on the EBMES dataset, i.e. no collapsing of categories has been undertaken. The single case coded as ‘refused’ on the ethnic group variable in the EMBES dataset has been excluded from all of the tables. Question wording and table-specific notes are provided at the bottom of each table. Note that respondents were asked to give a 0 to 10 scale by the EMBES questionnaire, where a score of 0 represents the lowest likeability, and a score of 10 would indicate the highest likeability. However, in the EMBES dataset, the scale ranges from 1 to 11 – so that a score of 1 represents the worst evaluation possible, and a score of 11 the most favourable assessment.

bc-embes-eth-table1

Table 2

Table 3

Table 4

Table 5

Table 6

BRIN users who are interested in further discussion of ethnicity and voting behaviour at previous British general elections may find the following references useful:

– Shamit Saggar and Anthony Heath, ‘Race: Towards a Multicultural Electorate?’ In: G. Evans and P. Norris eds (1999), Critical Elections: British Parties and Voters in Long-term Perspective. London: Sage.
– Shamit Saggar ed. (1998), Race and British Electoral Politics. London: Routledge.

I will post shortly about how the major political variables correlate with religious affiliation among the ethnic minority sample. If you need further detail on these analyses, contact me at the address below.

Dr Ben Clements
Department of Politics and International Relations, University of Leicester

bc101 @ leicester.ac.uk

Posted in Other, Religion and Politics | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Papal Visit – Final Reckoning

A significant amount of controversy surrounded the run-up to the state and pastoral visit of Pope Benedict XVI to Scotland and England on 16-19 September 2010, although, in retrospect, the visit was deemed by many to have been a success. Police estimates suggest that 500,000 people saw the pontiff during these four days, either at the events or along the popemobile routes.

One of the factors exercising voters and secularist organizations at the time was the likely cost of the visit, especially to the public purse. A large majority of the adult population in ComRes and Populus polls were opposed to taxpayer funding of the Pope’s tour, even though it was partly categorized as an official state visit. See our reports on these surveys at http://www.brin.ac.uk/news/?p=524 and http://www.brin.ac.uk/news/?p=562

The arguments about the cost of the visit were compounded by rumour and speculation, by the apparent lack of firm estimates, and by less than full transparency on the part of the Government and the Roman Catholic Church.

Only now, almost six months after the Pope flew back to Rome, are we beginning to get some financial clarity, greatly assisted by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO)’s recent release of some key documents.

These comprise the ‘contractual’ agreement between FCO, acting as budget holder for the visit, and the Church and a final statement of FCO non-policing expenditure on the visit (significantly, the draft budget was not divulged).

These papers can be viewed, under the reference DEP2011-0309.ZIP, in the deposited papers database section of the House of Commons Library website at:

http://deposits.parliament.uk./

The costs of the visit, as presented by FCO, essentially divide into three main components: a) costs incurred by FCO on behalf of Government; b) costs initially incurred by FCO but rechargeable to the Church, and to be refunded by the Church before 1 March 2011; and c) costs incurred directly by the Church.

Category a) costs are now known to have come to £6,981,000, split between seven Government Departments (including the Department for International Development, a fact which sparked some furore when it belatedly came to light on 3 February). This total was actually lower than anticipated, so each Department will get back £600,000 of the £1,850,000 which it had to pre-pay FCO.

The most expensive single Government item was £3,031,000 for the provision of media centre facilities at all the venues (some 3,000 media representatives were accredited). Other big-ticket (six-figure) items were:

  • £1,674,000 towards the beatification mass for John Henry Newman at Cofton Park, Birmingham and the follow-on meeting at Oscott College (19 September)
  • £484,000 for the event at St Mary’s University College, Twickenham (17 September)
  • £328,000 for the prayer vigil in Hyde Park, London (18 September)
  • £312,000 for live news feeds
  • £284,000 for the events in Westminster Hall and Westminster Abbey (17 September)
  • £264,000 for the mass at Bellahouston Park, Glasgow (16 September)
  • £147,000 for public liability insurance
  • £103,000 for pre-visit venue location and research costs

Category b) costs came to £6,347,000, of which £4,431,000 was incurred in connection with the beatification mass at Cofton Park and £1,180,000 for the Hyde Park vigil. The Church also paid £385,000 towards the St Mary’s event and picked up the webstreaming costs of £115,000, besides contributing to five other budget-lines.

Category c) costs were estimated by FCO at £3,800,000, and this figure has not been contradicted by the Church.

Category b) and c) costs combined therefore amount to about £10,100,000, well above the Church’s original estimate of its own expenditure of £7,000,000, but reasonably close to its final pre-visit forecast of between £9,000,000 and £10,000,000.

A statement recently issued by Papal Visit Ltd., the company set up by the Roman Catholic bishops’ conferences of England and Wales and Scotland, said that it had already raised £7,500,000 towards this £10,100,000.

The outstanding £2,600,000 will be taken up and underwritten by the dioceses, which will need to find the money by October 2012.

Unfortunately, some costs were not recorded centrally by FCO and are thus omitted from the foregoing analysis. According to the written statement by Henry Bellingham, Under-Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, to the House of Commons on 16 February, these exclusions appear to be:

  • policing costs
  • security services costs
  • local authorities costs
  • Whitehall Government Department staffing costs
  • Scottish Government costs

These exclusions prompted the National Secular Society (NSS), which has been an implacable critic of the visit throughout, to issue a press release on 25 February, accusing FCO of publishing figures which ‘just don’t add up’, and providing some of the missing data itself. This statement can be read at:

http://www.secularism.org.uk/pope-visit-figures-just-dont-add.html

Policing and local authority costs were said by FCO to have been ‘met within existing budgets’, but some more exact figures have emerged, for example £293,000 actually spent by Edinburgh City Council and £82,000 by Birmingham City Council.

Expenditure on policing has been especially disputed. Shortly before the papal visit, the Chief Constable of South Yorkshire, who was co-ordinating policing arrangements, put forward an estimate of between £1,000,000 and £1,500,000 for police costs. This was dismissed by NSS at the time as ‘total nonsense’.

Certainly, the initial (May 2010) estimate for the Metropolitan Police, for the two days which the Pope spent in London, was £1,800,000, including opportunity costs. Actual costs for three police forces are known: Lothian and Borders Police £543,000, Strathclyde Police £649,000, and West Midlands Police £280,000.

The cost of the papal visit to the security services is never likely to be revealed.

The Scottish Government has disclosed that it spent £800,000 on the visit.

Factoring in everything, and making guestimates for the continuingly unknown elements, the 2010 papal visit must have cost a minimum of £25,000,000, of which the state paid three-fifths (nationally and locally) and the Church two-fifths.

This is obviously a substantial sum, albeit only one-quarter of the ‘true cost’ of £100,000,000 which NSS was claiming in July 2010. Nor is it known how this compares with the cost of other (more secular) state visits.

BRIN would naturally be pleased to hear from any of its readers who have concrete and verifiable information which could refine this picture of the cost of the papal visit.

Posted in News from religious organisations, Official data, Religion in public debate, Research note | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Galliano Affair

Some nasty commercial consequences may be in store for Christian Dior, the iconic fashion, fragrance and jewellery brand, despite its prompt sacking last week of John Galliano, its head fashion designer since 1997, who has recently been exposed as shouting anti-Semitic abuse in a Paris bar and saying ‘I love Hitler’.

15% of British adults who normally buy Dior products say that they intend to boycott them in the light of the controversy over Galliano’s comments, according to a YouGov survey for today’s The Sunday Times. Fieldwork was conducted online on 3-4 March among a sample of 2,413 Britons aged 18 and over. The data tables will be found at:

http://today.yougov.co.uk/sites/today.yougov.co.uk/files/YG-Archives-Pol-ST-results-04-060311.pdf

80% of respondents do not normally purchase Dior merchandise. Of the 20% who do, 3% have been so offended by Galliano’s anti-Semitism that they are inclined to boycott Dior in future, while 12% will not do so and 5% do not know what they will do.

The number of potential boycotters rises to 6% in London and Scotland, equivalent to 23% and 29% respectively of Dior customers there, but otherwise there are no great variations by demographic sub-groups.

The potential commercial fallout might have been even greater were it not for the fact that 52% of Britons regard this as a one-off incident, down to a single designer with personal problems and which does not reflect a more generic issue of racism in the high fashion industry.

However, although just 16% think there is more widespread racism in the industry, far more are inclined to accuse it of other difficulties. 45% consider that dysfunctional and immoral behaviour is endemic throughout the industry, whereas 34% prefer to lay the blame at the door of a few eccentric figures.

Posted in Survey news | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment