Religious affiliation (by upbringing and current); religious practices; and impact of religion on everyday life (3353)
Type of Data: Religious affiliation (by upbringing and current); religious practices; and impact of religion on everyday life (3353)
Faith Community: General
Date: 2012, January-2014, May
Geography: United Kingdom
Sample Size: 51579 adults, 4049 young people
Population: Adults aged 16 and over, young people aged 10-15
Keywords: Attendance at religious services, charity, churchgoing, clothing, drink, food, friends, importance of religion, job, marriage, personal relationships, prayer, religion of upbringing, religious affiliation, savings, schooling
Collection Method: Face-to-face interview and self-completion questionnaire
Collection Agency: National Centre for Social Research (NatCen) and Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency
Sponsor: Institute for Social and Economic Research, University of Essex, with funding from the Economic and Social Research Council and a consortium of government departments
Published Source:
David Voas, ‘Understanding Society, Wave 4’, British Religion in Numbers, 20 December 2014, http://www.brin.ac.uk/2014/understanding-society-wave-4/
BRIN ID: 3353
Remarks:
Wave 4 of Understanding Society (United Kingdom Household Longitudinal Study). Questions on religious affiliation and attendance and on the difference made by religious beliefs were posed to the whole sample, but all other questions were put to ethnic minorities only. Dataset available at UKDA as SN 6614
Posted by: Clive D. Field
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Perhaps what I wrote wasn't clear. I suggested that new immigrants are more likely than others to have a religion.…