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Religious identity and attitudes to and experience of religious difference, with particular reference to sectarianism (3504)


Type of Data: Religious identity and attitudes to and experience of religious difference, with particular reference to sectarianism (3504)

Faith Community: General

Date: 2014, May-August

Geography: Scotland

Sample Size: 1501 (54% response)

Population: Adults aged 18 and over

Keywords: Anti-Catholicism, anti-Protestantism, Catholic-Protestant relationships, Catholics, church attendance, denominational schools, faith schools, family connections, Fenian, football, friends, Hun, importance of religion, Ireland, job discrimination, jokes, marches, Muslims, people with similar religious beliefs, Protestants, religion of upbringing, religious affiliation, religious difference, religious discrimination, religious harassment, religious identity, religious inter-marriage, religious prejudice, ScotCen Social Research, Scotland, Scottish Government, Scottish Parliament, Scottish Social Attitudes Survey, sectarian language, sectarianism, self-assessed religiosity, social networks

Collection Method: Face-to-face interview and self-completion questionnaire

Collection Agency: ScotCen Social Research

Sponsor: Consortium comprising Scottish Government and academic and charitable funders

Published Source:

  • Stephen Hinchliffe, Anna Marcinkiewicz, John Curtice, and Rachel Ormston, Scottish Social Attitudes Survey, 2014: Public Attitudes to Sectarianism in Scotland, Edinburgh: Scottish Government Social Research, 2015
  • Rachel Ormston, John Curtice, Stephen Hinchliffe, and Anna Marcinkiewicz, ‘A Subtle but Intractable Problem? Public Attitudes to Sectarianism in 2014’, Scottish Affairs, Vol. 24, 2015, pp. 266-87
  • http://www.brin.ac.uk/news/2015/muslim-voices-and-other-news/

    BRIN ID: 3504

    Remarks:

    Scottish Social Attitudes Survey, 2014.

    Posted by: Clive D. Field


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