british religion in numbers: the project and the sources project and the sources clive d. field...
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The Project and the Sources
Clive D. Field
School of History and Cultures, University of Birmingham
Institute for Social Change, University of Manchester
2
Overview
Includes • Project................................................ slides 3-10
• Official Sources................................ slides 11-13
• Unofficial Sources............................ slides 14-19
• Archival Examples........................... slides 20-23
• Contacts................................................. slide 24
Out of scope • Actual facts and figures about religious change
• Consideration of how far religion can be quantified
3
Project I. Funding
• Part of AHRC/ESRC Religion and Society Programme, directed by Professor Linda Woodhead http://www.religionandsociety.org.uk/
• £12 million awarded to 75 original research projects over 2007-2012
• BRIN awarded £267,000 to develop online centre for British data on religion over 2008-2010
• BRIN builds on earlier ESRC-funded work:
- Churches and Churchgoers (1977)
- Reviews of UK Statistical Sources: Religion (1987)
• BRIN complements adherents.com, ARDA, ARK and
other non-British websites
4
Project II. Team
• Based at Institute for Social Change, Faculty of Humanities, University of Manchester
• Co-directors David Voas (demographer/social scientist), and Clive Field (historian). Both with established research reputations in quantification of religion
• Siobhan McAndrew, research associate
• Sam Smith, technical adviser
• University of Manchester committed to maintain and continue to develop BRIN post-project
5
Project III. Statistics in Scope
• Historical (from 17th century) and contemporary
• National (excluding Northern Ireland) with selection of local
• Published (print and online) and unpublished
• Serial (recurrent) and non-recurrent
• Collected by state, faith communities and other agencies
• Organizational and measures of personal beliefs, practices and attitudes
• Full spectrum of religions (including non-Christian and alternative) and irreligion
6
Project IV: Goals
• Promised project deliverables (all online): - Fully searchable guide to statistical sources
- Key time series data (subject to copyright)
- Interpretation and visual presentation of data
• To meet needs of: - Academics - Policy-makers
- Media - Faith communities
- General public
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Project V. Innovation
• Broad temporal, geographical and thematic coverage
• Integrates historical and contemporary data
• Offers interpretation as well as raw data
• Bridges academic and non-academic worlds
• Online resource with interactive features
• Facility for (moderated) external expert input
• Entirely free at point of end-use
• Will be continuously updated post-project
8
Project VI. Website
• brin.ac.uk to be formally launched 29-30 March at Conference for Innovative Methods in the Study of Religion, Royal Mint, London
• Website features include (at varying stages of development): - Database of sources - Maps, charts and tables
- Commentaries - News
- Links - FAQs
- Site search - But no datasets
9
Project VII. Database Example
Religious beliefs, practices and attitudes
BRIN ID: 255
Faith Community: General, Christianity (Church of England)
Type of Data: Religious beliefs, practices and attitudes
Date: 2008, 12-19 November
Geography: United Kingdom
Sample Size: 15,456
Population: Adults aged 50 and over
Subject Keywords: Agnosticism, atheism, Church and state, church attendance, churchgoing, Church of England, disestablishment, God, influence of religion, older people, places of worship, prayer, religious affiliation, state funding, strength of religious beliefs, younger people
Collection Method: Online interview
Collection Agency: Populus
Sponsor: Saga
Published Source: Daily Telegraph, 2 January 2009
Baptist Times, 8 January 2009
Church of England Newspaper, 9 January 2009
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Project VIII: Challenges
• Huge scope – in retrospect, original application
should have bid for more resources!
• Reviews of UK Statistical Sources: Religion
(1987) required more extensive overhaul than
originally envisaged
• Copyright-clearance took longer than anticipated
• Software bugs
• Variable data quality and reconciliation issues
• Missing data and lost/destroyed records
11
Sources I: Official 1600-1830 • Key driver was alliance of Church and state
• Data mostly collected by Church for state, which lacked data-gathering infrastructure
• Particular preoccupation with Roman Catholics and Protestant Nonconformists
• National censuses England and Wales 1603, 1676; Scotland 1755; Ireland 1732-33, 1764-66
• Censuses of Roman Catholics, England and Wales, 1705-06, 1767, 1780
• Census of Nonconformists, England and Wales, 1829. Registration of meeting-houses from 1689
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Sources II: Official 1830-1914 • Parliamentary statistics of established churches,
especially from 1830s
• Parliamentary statistics of education
• Registration of marriages from 1838/1855
• Censuses of religious profession in Ireland, 1834 and decennially from 1861
• Census of church accommodation and attendance in Great Britain 1851
• Certification of places of worship from 1852
• Religious profession of soldiers, prisoners etc.
• Religious charities from 1817
13
Sources III: Official 1914-Present • Previous series (marriages, soldiers, prisoners,
charities, education, Irish religious profession etc.) continued
• Religious profession of Royal Navy from 1939 and Royal Air Force from 1963
• Some non-recurrent opinion surveys, eg Sunday
• Religious profession in 2001 and 2011 censuses (subordinate to ethnicity)
• Citizenship Survey biennially from 2001
• Religious profession in annual Labour Force Survey from 2002 (earlier in Northern Ireland)
14
Sources IV: Unofficial Established Churches
Church of England and Church in Wales – Diocesan clergy visitation returns from 1706
– Individual clergy pioneers, eg Abraham Hume
– Centralized data collection from 1891
– Church of England Statistical Unit from 1955
– Ad hoc, non-recurrent research by central departments and some dioceses from 1960s
Church of Scotland – Centralized data collection from 1876
15
Sources V: Unofficial Free Churches • Some suspicion of statistics: King David’s sin in
numbering people of Israel
• 18th/19th century cross-denominational initiatives (eg Evans List 1715-1729) in support of easing of legislative restrictions on Dissent and campaign for disestablish-ment of Church of England
• Centralized data collection starts with Methodists 1766, but for other large denominations only in late 19th century
• Sundry ad hoc research from 1960s
16
Sources VI: Unofficial
Roman Catholic Church
• Most 17th/18th-century statistics collected by state/ Church of England
• Periodic returns to Vatican from 1773
• Restoration of hierarchies 1850/1878 spurs data-gathering, but no national system and no proper quality control
• Newman Demographic Survey, 1953-64 briefly lays foundations for national system
• Since Survey’s demise, no effective centralized data-gathering
• Voluntary endeavours of Pastoral Research Centre from 1964
17
Sources VII: Unofficial Ecumenical
• Some of most successful 20th-century efforts international and largely missions-based, including World Religion Database
• Several stalled national initiatives, eg British Council of Churches; Nationwide Initiative in Evangelism; Inter-Church Research Group; Churches Information for Mission
• Christian Research most productive since 1982, now part of Bible Society. Publishes UK Christian Resources Handbook and Religious Trends, conducts censuses of churchgoing, etc.
18
Sources VIII: Unofficial
Non-Christian Faiths
Judaism • Data-gathering from mid-19th century, initially driven by
external factors (Jewish emancipation, aliens question etc.) but efforts intermittent
• Board of Deputies of British Jews sets up Statistical and Demographic Research Unit 1965
• Also independent Institute for Jewish Policy Research
Other faiths • Virtually no statistics collected from within faith
communities – most data collected by ‘outsiders’
19
Sources IX: Unofficial
Other Agencies
• Social investigators from 1830s, but mostly localized and ad hoc surveys
• Opinion pollsters from 1937
• Academic researchers from 1930s, including community studies and some serial datasets
• Print media, including late 19th century local censuses of churchgoing, 1875-1914 and – latterly – readership surveys and opinion polls
• Broadcast media from 1930s, especially audience research and opinion polls
20
Archival Examples I
• Many statistics collated and published, in print or (increasingly) on web
• Following collation and publication, original schedules etc. often destroyed
• Much material never published, some surviving in archives (examples follow) but much lost
• Often unclear what has survived, especially for post-1945 era
• Hence importance of current religious archives survey (including question on statistical sources)
21
Archival Examples II
• 1603 Religious Census – British Library, Bodleian Library, local repositories
• 1676 Religious Census – William Salt Library, Lambeth Palace Library, local repositories
• 1705-06, 1767, 1780 ‘Papist Returns’ – House of Lords Record Office
• 18th/19th Century Church of England Clergy Visitation Returns – local repositories
• 1715-29 and 1772-73 Dissenting Lists – Dr Williams’s Library
22
Archival Examples III
• 1755 Religious Census – National Library of Scotland
• 1829 ‘Return of Sectaries’ – local repositories
• 1851 Religious Census – The National Archives
• Ecclesiastical/Church Commissioners – Church of England Record Centre
• Religious Profession of Armed Services – Ministry of Defence
• Mass-Observation Surveys – Mass-Observation Archive, University of Sussex
23
Archival Examples IV
• Newman Demographic Survey – Pastoral Research Centre
• Audience Research Data – BBC, Broadcasters Audience Research Board
• Methodist Sociological Group Surveys – John Rylands University Library
• Opinion Poll Data – polling agencies and/or clients, Clive Field collection
• Official/Unofficial Datasets – Economic and Social Data Service, Roper Center
• Ad hoc Christian Surveys – Christian Research
24
Contacts
• c.d.field@bham.ac.uk
• siobhan.mcandrew@manchester.ac.uk
website
• http://www.brin.ac.uk
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