Pew studies and analyzes issues at the intersection of religion and public affairs by conducting surveys, demographic analyses, and other research about the practice of religion and its place in American life.
Recent work includes a major portrait of Jews in America and interviews with 38,000 Muslims around the globe to provide a more complete understanding of the beliefs and political views of members of the world’s second- largest religion.
Recent Work
Incidents against Jewish people in 2020 ranged from verbal and physical assaults to vandalism of cemeteries and scapegoating for the pandemic.
The post Anti-Jewish harassment occurred in 94 countries in 2020, up from earlier years appeared first on Pew Research Center.
Most U.S. adults are neutral toward several religious groups, though Americans tend to rate their own religious group positively. More than a third of Americans hold unfavorable views of multiple religious groups.
The post Americans Feel More Positive Than Negative About Jews, Mainline Protestants, Catholics appeared first on Pew Research Center.
Not all U.S. Catholics share the pope's concerns on climate change; their views vary by political affiliation, race and ethnicity, and age.
The post The pope is concerned about climate change. How do U.S. Catholics feel about it? appeared first on Pew Research Center.
About a third of U.S. parents with children under 18 say it’s extremely or very important to them that their kids share their religious beliefs.
The post 70% of White evangelical parents say it’s very important that their kids have similar religious beliefs to theirs appeared first on Pew Research Center.
Religiously unaffiliated people were harassed by governments, private groups or both in 27 countries in 2020.
The post Religiously unaffiliated people face harassment in a growing number of countries appeared first on Pew Research Center.
Here is a look at data on the number of legal abortions and other related measures that take place in the United States each year.
The post What the data says about abortion in the U.S. appeared first on Pew Research Center.
While there has been a decades-long decline in the Christian share of U.S. adults, 88% of the voting members in the new 118th Congress identify as Christian. That is only a few points lower than their share in the late 1970s.
The post Faith on the Hill appeared first on Pew Research Center.
58% of U.S. adults say they do not believe “we are living in the end times” – the destruction of the world as we know it.
The post About four-in-ten U.S. adults believe humanity is ‘living in the end times’ appeared first on Pew Research Center.