Summary information

Study title

Catholics in Britain Survey, 2019

Creator

Clements, B, University of Leicester
Bullivant, S, St Mary's University

Study number / PID

855354 (UKDA)

10.5255/UKDA-SN-855354 (DOI)

Data access

Restricted

Series

Not available

Abstract

The overall aim was to conduct a wide-ranging survey of Catholic adults living in Britain, which asked about many aspects of their lives, including their socio-demographic circumstances, the nature and extent of their religious engagement (belonging, behaviour and beliefs), their views of the Catholic Church’s leadership, institutions and teachings, and their social and political attitudes. The survey was conducted online by Savanta ComRes, in October-November 2019. This is a cross-sectional dataset, based on interviews with 1,823 self-identifying Catholics adults in Britain (aged 18 and over).In recent decades, the religious profile of British society has changed significantly, with a marked increase in 'religious nones', declining proportions identifying as Anglican or with a particular Non-Conformist tradition, an increase in non-denominational Christians, and the spread of non-Christian faiths. Within this wider context, Roman Catholics have remained broadly stable as a proportion of the adult population and represent the second largest Christian denomination in Britain, after Anglicans. However, there have been significant internal and external developments which have affected the institutional church and wider Roman Catholic community in Britain, and which could have shaped how Catholics' think about and engage with their faith and how it impacts their daily lives. Recent years have seen demographic change through significant inflows of Catholic migrants coming from Eastern Europe, the papal visit of Pope Benedict XVI to Britain in autumn 2010 (the first since 1982), Pope Francis's pontificate from 2013 onwards, Catholic leaders' political interventions against 'aggressive secularism' and in other policy debates, and internal crises and debates impacting on the perceived authority of the Catholic Church. The last major academic investigation of the Catholic community (and only in England and Wales) was undertaken in the late 1970s (Hornsby-Smith and Lee...
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Methodology

Data collection period

21/10/2019 - 07/11/2019

Country

Great Britain

Time dimension

Not available

Analysis unit

Individual

Universe

Not available

Sampling procedure

Not available

Kind of data

Numeric

Data collection mode

The cross-sectional survey of Catholic adults aged 18 and over living in Britain (England, Wales, and Scotland) was administered online by the survey research organisation Savanta ComRes, a member of the British Polling Council. The fieldwork was undertaken between 21st October and 7th November 2019. Respondents were first asked a screening question on religious identity, in order to sample only those individuals who self-identified as Catholic. This screening question used the long-running British Social Attitudes survey question for religious identification: ‘Do you regard yourself as belonging to any particular religion? If yes, which?’. The interview was immediately terminated for those respondents who self-identified with another religion or did not self-identity with any religion. The total number of individuals in the survey sample is 1,823.

Funding information

Grant number

AH/S003258/1

Access

Publisher

UK Data Service

Publication year

2022

Terms of data access

The Data Collection is available for download to users registered with the UK Data Service.

Related publications

Not available