British Muslim attitudes to policing, extremism, and the Prevent programme (4039)
Type of Data: British Muslim attitudes to policing, extremism, and the Prevent programme (4039)
Faith Community: Islam
Date: 2019, 28 October–8 November (Muslims), 25–31 October (adults)
Geography: Great Britain
Sample Size: 1000 Muslims, 1000 adults
Population: Muslims aged 18 and over, adults aged 18 and over (as a control group)
Keywords: Crest Advisory, far right extremism, good place, institutions, Islamist extremism, Islamophobia, local area, mosque attendance, Muslims, newspaper readership, police, poor place, Prevent, problem, radicalization, referring, religious affiliation, religious attendance, Savanta ComRes, target British Muslims, terrorism, treat Muslims fairly, treat Muslims unfairly, trust, voting intention
Collection Method: Online interview
Collection Agency: Savanta ComRes
Sponsor: Crest Advisory, with funding from a charitable trust
Survey Instrument: Clements, Roberts, and Forman, Listening to British Muslims, pp. 113–21
Published Source:
Jon Clements, Manon Roberts, and Dan Forman, Listening to British Muslims: Policing, Extremism, and Prevent, London: Crest Advisory, 2020http://www.comresglobal.com
BRIN ID: 4039
Remarks:
Prevent is the government’s counter-radicalization programme. The online fieldwork was preceded by a qualitative phase of research, comprising 12 focus groups attended by a total of 86 British Muslim participants, the results of which informed development of the questionnaire for the quantitative phase. Respondents who were employed in journalism, public relations, market research, the media/broadcasting, and policy, or who had family or close friends working in these fields, were screened out of the online recruitment process, in order to eliminate those likely to have disproportionate knowledge of the issues covered in the survey. Muslim data were weighted by age, gender, region, and ethnicity so as to be representative of the Muslim population at the 2011 census.
Posted by: Clive D. Field
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