Who’s for Alpha?

The March-June 2010 issue of the UK edition of Alpha News, the thrice-yearly print newspaper of the Alpha course, reports some headline findings about public perceptions of Alpha from an Ipsos MORI poll conducted among a representative sample of 1,997 British adults between 9 and 15 October 2009.

Alpha was started by Charles Marnham at Holy Trinity Brompton (HTB), London in October 1977 but has really taken off since about 1992. The course is a 15-session practical introduction to the Christian faith designed primarily for non-churchgoers and new Christians. It is now run by churches of every major denomination in 163 countries, and from prisons, universities, workplaces and homes as well as in places of worship.

Alpha UK has been monitoring its impact in a series of Ipsos MORI polls since 1999 (although HTB’s reporting of them has been somewhat selective).

The latest survey is said to reveal that nearly four million Britons who have not done the Alpha course express some degree of interest in it. Awareness of Alpha among the public is claimed to be at a record high, with 24% able to identify it as a Christian course, compared with 9% a decade ago.

The poll also shows that last autumn’s annual UK advertising campaign for Alpha (featuring posters asking ‘Does God exist?’ and ‘Is this it?’) was the most successful yet, with 20% of adults saying that they had seen one of the posters, almost double the figure for October 2008.

For those wishing to study Alpha from an academic perspective, there are two important books by Stephen Hunt: Anyone for Alpha? Evangelism in a Post-Christian Society (London: Darton, Longman and Todd, 2001) and The Alpha Enterprise: Evangelism in a Post-Christian Era (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2004). Hunt has also written a number of articles about Alpha, which can be traced at:

http://www.uwe.ac.uk/hlss/sociology/staff_shunt.shtml

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The RELACHS Study

It’s been a little while since I made a post here, having spent some time fixing other parts of the site. But I’ll make a dip back into the BRIN blog by flagging up the RELACHS survey.

RELACHS is not yet listed in the BRIN database, either because it’s a community survey (which are not generally in scope) or because at first sight it wasn’t a specifically religious survey. The research team are epidemiology and mental health specialists, with the East London and City Health Authority funding the first phase. It’s a longitudinal study of young people in East London, based in schools in Hackney, Tower Hamlets and Newham. The first wave was run in 2001, with 30 schools taking part, involving 2,800 students from years 7 (11-12) and 9 (13-14). The second phase followed up the students in 2003, and the third followed up the students aged 11-12 in 2001 in 2005, when they were 15 and 16.

However, the geographic area surveyed is highly diverse in ethnic and religious terms, and the questionnaires included items on religious identity, frequency of religious practice, experience of religiously or racially-motivated bullying, and on issues such as sexual behaviour and traditional dress. Researchers interested in the relationship between religiosity and health – mental health, obesity, alcohol use – will find the published outputs very useful.

For example, DCSF sponsored a paper reporting the religious and cultural factors assocaited with adolescent sexual behaviour, available here:

http://www.dcsf.gov.uk/research/data/uploadfiles/rw42d.pdf

The questionnaires and summaries of findings to date can be found on the RELACHS website at http://www.relachs.org

The published outputs so far seem very interesting, crossing the boundary between sociology and epidemiology. However, there is undoubtedly more to be gleaned, particularly by researchers interested in youth religiosity. It’s not clear whether the data have been archived yet for use by other researchers – I’ll post here when I learn more.

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Jews and the 2011 Census

The Jewish Chronicle of 5 March 2010 reports that, following a lengthy process of consultation with the Board of Deputies of British Jews and the Institute for Jewish Policy Research, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) has agreed to make the 2011 census schedule available in Yiddish, in an attempt to boost the response rate from Jews. The move has been welcomed by Dr David Graham, the Institute’s Director of Social and Demographic Research.

However, the plan has gone down less well with the leaders of the strictly orthodox Jewish community of Stamford Hill, which was one of the intended beneficiaries. They have branded the government concession as ‘political correctness and tokenism’ and ‘patronising’. They would prefer instead for the questions to be asked in Hebrew (as ONS had originally offered), for the assistance of Israelis marrying into the Stamford Hill community.

The controversy is not simply an academic issue since the 2001 census is believed to have underenumerated the Jewish population, with (among other things) consequential implications for the provision of local authority services.

In particular, according to Graham, there was a suspected undercount of the ultra-orthodox Charedim, especially in Stamford Hill and Broughton Park, possibly of the order of 30-40%. In the former, in fact, the census identified only 8,000 Jews, whereas local community leaders estimated the number as nearer 20,000.

The phenomenon of Jewish underenumeration in 2001 has been debated in the journal Population, Space and Place. See David Graham and Stanley Waterman, ‘Underenumeration of the Jewish Population in the UK 2001 Census’, Vol. 11, 2005, pp. 89-102; David Voas, ‘Estimating the Jewish Undercount in the 2001 Census: A Comment on Graham and Waterman’, Vol. 13, 2007, pp. 401-7; and David Graham and Stanley Waterman, ‘Locating Jews by Ethnicity: A Reply to D. Voas’, Vol. 13, 2007, pp. 409-14.

For other analyses of Judaism in the 2001 census, see: Marlena Schmool, ‘British Jewry in 2001: First Impressions from the Censuses’, Jewish Year Book, 2004, pp. xx-xxxi; Gareth Piggott and Rob Lewis, 2001 Census Profile: The Jewish Population of London, London: Greater London Authority, 2006; David Graham, Marlena Schmool and Stanley Waterman, Jews in Britain: A Snapshot from the 2001 Census, London: Institute for Jewish Policy Research, 2007; and Marlena Schmool, Scotland’s Jews, Glasgow: Scottish Council of Jewish Communities, 2008.

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Atlas of Global Christianity

2010 marks the centenary of the World Missionary Conference, Edinburgh, 1910. It will be celebrated by several conferences (both academic and missionary) and by a number of major publications.

Edinburgh 1910 was not just a significant event in the history of Christian missions. It is also conventionally regarded as the start of the modern ecumenical movement.

Perhaps less well-known in the context of British Religion in Numbers is that Edinburgh 1910 was accompanied by the publication of a Statistical Atlas of Christian Missions, which laid the foundation for a whole series of cartographic and quantitative works which have been important in the development of religious statistics. These are listed in section 2.10 of Clive Field’s Religious Statistics in Great Britain: An Historical Introduction, available on this website.

To commemorate the centenary, Edinburgh University Press has recently released Atlas of Global Christianity, 1910-2010, edited by Todd Johnson and Kenneth Ross, xix + 361pp. plus CD-ROM (ISBN: 0748632670 and 9780748632671). The full price of this hardback is £150, but it is available more cheaply from a number of online suppliers.

Johnson is Director of the Center for the Study of Global Christianity at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary. He is the co-author (with David Barrett and George Kurian) of the second edition of the World Christian Encyclopedia (2001) and of World Christian Trends (2001). He is also editor of the World Christian Database (http://www.worldchristiandatabase.org), published by Brill.

Ross is Council Secretary of the Church of Scotland World Mission Council and Honorary Fellow of the School of Divinity, University of Edinburgh. Since 2001 he has chaired the Scottish Towards 2010 Council.

Atlas of Global Christianity, 1910-2010 is a compilation of full-colour maps, graphs, tables, essays and other reference materials on Christianity contributed by a team of 64 experts, together with background information on world issues and other world religions. The CD-ROM contains all the visuals in exportable format, to facilitate use for teaching.

The volume charts the history (over the last hundred years) and current state both of Christianity in general and of Christian mission and evangelism. It effectively visualizes the shift in the epicentre of Christianity, from the ‘Global North’ to the ‘Global South’, which has occurred during the course of the twentieth century.

Although there are some country-specific data, much of the analysis is inevitably at the continental/sub-continental or denominational levels, incorporating a fair degree of numerical estimation.

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Profile of Roman Catholic Youth in England and Wales

The Catholic Youth Ministry Federation (CYMFed) has recently launched a preliminary report on the beliefs, practices and attitudes of Roman Catholic young people in England and Wales during the course of its first national congress, held in London on 27 February.

CYMFed was set up in 2009 as an umbrella body for 32 Catholic dioceses, religious orders and organizations working with young people in England and Wales. It is endorsed by the Roman Catholic Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales.

Entitled Mapping the Terrain: Discovering the Reality of Young Catholics, the eight-page document can be downloaded from:

http://www.cymfed.org/CYMFEDresearchMAPPINGTHETERRAIN.pdf

The report is based upon an online survey administered by nfp Synergy in August 2009 to a sample of 1,000 young people aged 11-25 (but disproportionately aged 15-19) who either self-identify as Catholics (62%) or who attend Catholic schools/come from Catholic families (38%).  

The picture which is revealed is of a stressed and misunderstood generation whose faith is diverse, complex, multi-layered and often unorthodox. The authors of the report rationalize this in terms of ‘the tireless ability of young people to hold conflicting principles in tension’.

Headline findings include:

  • Although believing in God is ranked as an important aspect of being a Catholic by eight in ten, only 35% of self-identifying Catholics and 22% of all Catholics affirm an orthodox belief in a personally involved God
  • Of those aged 15-25 and describing themselves as Catholic, 54% recognize the importance of a Catholic going to mass regularly, but only 37% claim to go to mass or another religious service monthly or more frequently (with 17% never going) and just 16% say that going to mass is important to them personally
  • Commitment to orthodox Catholic beliefs and practices falls sharply across the age bands, with those aged 11-14 being most devout, 57% of whom believe in a creator God who is personally involved in the world, and 64% attend mass regularly  
  • 43% of self-identifying Catholics consider that religions cause more harm than good, 36% that people should keep their religious views to themselves to avoid hurting the feelings of others, and only 22% approve of somebody trying to convert another person to his or her religion
  • 83% of respondents describe the Catholic Church in terms of a cluster of adjectives such as authoritative, boring, cautious, conservative, established, exclusive or traditional

CYMFed has indicated that a fuller report on the survey will be published in autumn 2010, to include comparative national and denominational statistics.

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Should the Burka Be Banned in Britain? Take 2

A month after the publication of a ComRes poll for The Independent on whether the burka should be banned in Britain (see our earlier news post at http://www.brin.ac.uk/news/?p=45), another survey on the subject has just appeared.

This one is by Harris Interactive on behalf of the Financial Times. It was conducted online among a representative sample of 1,097 Britons aged 16-64 between 3 and 10 February 2010, and also in France, Germany, Italy, Spain, the United States and China.

Asked whether they wished to follow the French government’s lead in seeking a ban on the wearing of the burka, 57% of Britons said yes and 26% no, with 18% unsure.

This suggests that opinion against the burka has hardened somewhat since the ComRes poll (which used a more subtle battery of four questions).

The proportion in favour of banning the burka in Britain was less than in France (70%), Spain (65%) and Italy (63%), but more than in Germany (50%), the United States (33%) and China (27%).

Interviewees were further asked whether they would support a burka ban if it were accompanied by a clamp-down on the wearing of all religious icons, such as the Christian crucifix or the Jewish cappel.

Only 9% of Britons indicated that they would back this more generic ban on religious dress, and even in France the proportion favouring this move was reduced to 22%.

The Harris press release about the poll (which also covered attitudes to body scanners in airports) will be found at:

http://news.harrisinteractive.com/profiles/investor/ResLibraryView.asp?BzID=1963&ResLibraryID=36557&Category=1777

An article by James Blitz (‘Majority supports outlawing the burka’) appeared on page 4 of the Financial Times for 2 March 2010. This can be accessed online (but without the graphic) at:

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/d11ac1e0-2598-11df-9bd3-00144feab49a.html?nclick_check=1

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Examination Performance of Muslim Schools

The current issue (No. 250, 26 February 2010) of The Muslim News, the independent monthly newspaper for Muslims in the UK, features a league table of the 2009 GCSE (and equivalent) examination performance of 1,683 students attending 63 Muslim schools and colleges, of which just five are voluntary-aided.

The league table shows that Muslim schools surpass national GCSE averages in two important respects. In modern foreign languages 71% of students at these schools and colleges attained at least one A* to C grade, 26% higher than the national average. The figure is 79% in boys’ schools, 71% in girls’ schools and 59% in co-educational Muslim schools.

The number of Muslim students attaining five or more GCSE passes at A* to C grade is, at 61%, 11% higher than the national average. The figure is 65% for boys’ schools, 63% for girls’ schools and 50% for co-educational Muslim schools.

Additionally, with the exception of the average point score per student, it is said that Muslim schools outperform the national average in all the other indicators. All but nine of the schools and colleges had every student achieve at least one GCSE qualification.

An article by Elham Asaad Buaras containing an analysis of the league table is freely available online at:

http://www.muslimnews.co.uk/paper/index.php?article=4516

However, the full league table may only be consulted in the print edition of the newspaper, which may be purchased for £2 from The Muslim News, PO Box 380, Harrow, Middlesex, HA2 6LL.

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What do we think of the Pope?

Pope Benedict XVI is to visit Great Britain later this year. But how do British people rate him? Some clues to this are given in the latest (the fifth) wave of the world leaders opinion barometer, undertaken by Harris Interactive on behalf of the news channel France 24 and the International Herald Tribune newspaper.

In Great Britain 1,076 adults aged 16-64 were interviewed online between 28 October and 4 November 2009. Interviews were also conducted in France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the United States of America. Opinions were sought about 21 world leaders, including the Pope and the Dalai Lama. Topline results are available at:

http://www.harrisinteractive.fr/news/2009/baro_worldleaders_V5_UK_final.pdf

In terms of popularity ranking, the Pope features in fourth position in Great Britain, with 36% holding a very or somewhat good opinion of him, a rise of 3% over the fourth wave in April 2009 but seven points below the six-country average. The Dalai Lama comes second (58%), the same as in the United States, which he has visited recently, although the four continental European countries record much higher percentages.

Barack Obama, the American president, stands in first place (72%) for popularity with Britons. The current British prime minister, Gordon Brown, comes eighth and his predecessor, Tony Blair, seventh.

At the other end of the scale, 33% of Britons have a poor opinion of the Pope, suggesting that his pastoral visit to Britain could well spark controversy, compared with 8% having a poor opinion of the Dalai Lama.

This negativity towards the Pope is manifest in the four other European countries, reaching a high of 56% in Spain. Americans are better disposed towards the Pope, with an overall mean favourability score of 2.9, against the six-country average and the British figure (both 2.3).  

When it comes to a great deal or some influence in the world, the Pope drops to eighth position in Great Britain, 33% (2% down on the fourth wave) and the lowest figure in all six nations apart from France (Italians, 65%, rate him most highly for influence).

The Dalai Lama ranks thirteenth (27%) on this measure in Britain, with Brown in seventh position and Blair in tenth. 35% of Britons judge the Pope to have little or no influence, compared with 37% who say the same of the Dalai Lama.

This produces an average British index of popularity and influence of 35% for the Pope and 43% for the Dalai Lama. Obama is out in front on this combined scale, on 71%, with Angela Merkel of Germany also scoring well, at 41%. Brown and Blair, the two British politicians, fare less well than the two world spiritual leaders, scoring 31% and 29% respectively.

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Attitudes to Muslims: Round-Up of Recent YouGov Polls

Founded only in 2000, YouGov has rapidly become one of the best-known polling companies in contemporary Britain. It operates mainly via online interviews among a panel of more than 250,000 adults aged 18 and over.

Although YouGov has undertaken relatively few religion-specific surveys, relevant questions often lie buried among some of its more general studies. The following data on attitudes to Islam and Muslims have been taken from the tabulations of recent polls posted at:

http://www.yougov.co.uk/corporate/archives/press-archives-intro.asp

  • Only 13% of all adults feel that most Muslims are integrated into British society, 60% maintaining that many lead completely separate lives and a further 21% that most lead completely separate lives (fieldwork 12-13 November 2009, n= 2,026)
  • 80% of all adults support Government’s recent decision to ban the radical group Islam4UK, which was planning to hold a march through Wootton Bassett in protest at the war in Afghanistan, while 14% disagree, arguing that freedom of speech is more important (fieldwork 14-15 January 2010, n= 2,033)
  • 81% of all adults consider that Anjem Choudary, Islam4UK’s spokesperson, is cynically abusing the benefits system by claiming £25,000 a year in benefits, despite being a qualified lawyer (fieldwork 14-15 January 2010, n= 2,033)
  • 32% of all adults are worried that they and their immediate family might be victims of an attack by Islamic terrorists in Britain, whereas 64% are not concerned (fieldwork 5-7 January 2010, n= 10,344)
  • 62% of all adults are convinced that Islamic terrorism is a slightly or much bigger problem for Britain than other Western countries, with 29% thinking it is no worse a problem (fieldwork 5-7 January 2010, n= 10,344)
  • Of adults believing Islamic terrorism to be a worse problem for Britain, 38% attribute this to Britain’s relationship with the USA, 35% to the failure to punish or expel Islamic radicals who preach violence, and 24% to the number of Muslim immigrants in Britain (fieldwork 5-7 January 2010, n= 10,344)
  • 42% of young people aged 14-25 believe that Muslims often suffer unfair discrimination in Britain, as against 20% thinking this to be true of the Jews, the other religious group enquired about – the numbers feeling they received unfair advantage were 21% and 5% respectively (fieldwork 18-25 November 2009, n= 3,994)
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