Jewish identities (4319)
Type of Data: Jewish identities (4319)
Faith Community: Judaism
Date: 2022, 16 November-23 December
Geography: United Kingdom
Sample Size: 4891
Population: Self-identifying Jewish adults aged 16 and over resident in the UK
Keywords: Aliyah, anti-Semitism, attachment to Israel, Bar and Bat Mitzvah, British identity, Chanukah observance, charitable giving, Christmas, circumcision, Covid-19 pandemic, ethnicity, funerals, God, happiness, Hebrew, Holocaust, Institute for Jewish Policy Research, intermarriage, Israel, Jewish commemoration events, Jewish community engagement, Jewish denominational strand, Jewish employment, Jewish festivals, Jewish halachic background, Jewish identity, Jewish languages, Jewish people, Jewish religious or cultural consumption, Jewish schools, Jews, kashrut, keeping kosher, Passover seder, Pesach, prayer, religiosity, religious festivals, religious switching, Rosh Hashana, Shabbat observance, synagogue attendance, synagogue membership, Torah, volunteering, Yiddish, Yom Kippur fasting, Zionism
Collection Method: Primarily online interview
Collection Agency: Institute for Jewish Policy Research
Published Source:
David Graham and Jonathan Boyd, Jews in the UK Today: Key Findings from the JPR National Jewish Identity Survey, London: Institute for Jewish Policy Research, 2024
BRIN ID: 4319
Remarks:
National Jewish Identity Survey. Conducted among a convenience sample (self-selecting panel members) of self-identifying Jews aged 16 and over living in the UK. The results were weighted in line with UK census data and Jewish community data on synagogue membership. In addition to the general report mentioned as a published source, there were several shorter papers on specific topics; all are available on the Institute for Jewish Policy Research’s website.
Posted by: Clive D. Field
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