An interesting study by the US-based Pew Research Center’s Religion & Public Life Project takes a look at religious diversity around the world.
The study compares religious diversity around the entire world, per region and per individual country. The world's five main religions Buddhism, Christianity,
Hinduism, Islam and Judaism are represented in the study, as are 'religiously unaffiliated' people, adherents of folk or 'traditional religions' and adherents of 'other religions'.
Some of the results quite surprised me; I had for instance expected countries such as India, Israel and Saudi Arabia to have a larger religious majority than they actually do. Head over to the Pew Research Center to check out the survey for yourself and see how your country rates!
About the Pew Research Center:
"The Pew Research Center’s Religion & Public Life Project, launched in 2001 as the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life, seeks to promote a deeper understanding of issues at the intersection of religion and public affairs.
The project conducts surveys, demographic studies and other social science research to examine a wide range of issues concerning religion and society in the United States and around the world – from shifting religious composition to the influence of religion on politics to the extent of government and social restrictions on religion. The project also covers a range of issues that often have a religious component – from abortion and gay marriage to stem cell research and church-state controversies."
http://www.pewforum.org/about/
The study compares religious diversity around the entire world, per region and per individual country. The world's five main religions Buddhism, Christianity,
Hinduism, Islam and Judaism are represented in the study, as are 'religiously unaffiliated' people, adherents of folk or 'traditional religions' and adherents of 'other religions'.
Some of the results quite surprised me; I had for instance expected countries such as India, Israel and Saudi Arabia to have a larger religious majority than they actually do. Head over to the Pew Research Center to check out the survey for yourself and see how your country rates!
About the Pew Research Center:
"The Pew Research Center’s Religion & Public Life Project, launched in 2001 as the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life, seeks to promote a deeper understanding of issues at the intersection of religion and public affairs.
The project conducts surveys, demographic studies and other social science research to examine a wide range of issues concerning religion and society in the United States and around the world – from shifting religious composition to the influence of religion on politics to the extent of government and social restrictions on religion. The project also covers a range of issues that often have a religious component – from abortion and gay marriage to stem cell research and church-state controversies."
http://www.pewforum.org/about/
Comments
Post a Comment
In case of spam, I will turn comment moderation on. Please don't make me!