Rate
:
Percentage with No Religion
Rates are used to define comparative statistics that can be
mapped and graphed.
For example, our occupational information includes counts
of the number of workers in employment and out of employment,
as well as the total number of workers.
We then define a measure called the 'Unemployment Rate',
which uses the number out of work rather than the number
in work, and expresses it as a percentage of the total,
rather than a rate per thousand.
The descriptive text in the system is defined mainly
for rates.
- Identifier:
-
R_REL2001_none
- Name:
-
Percentage with No Religion
- Type:
-
Rate (R)
- Definition:
-
REL2001:none
*
100.0
/
TOT_POP:now
- Display as:
- Separate data values
- Text:
-
Given the low numbers actually attending church, it is perhaps surprising that
so few claimed they had no religion.
Should we conclude from the geographical pattern that the Scots were more godless,
or just more honest?
Given the small numbers in non-Christian religions, the pattern for 'no religion' was largely
a mirror image of the pattern for Christians, with lower numbers in the north than the south
of England and, perhaps surprisingly, lower numbers in the cities than in rural areas.
For what it is worth, the district in Britain with the most non-believers was Aberdeen (42%),
and the top seventeen were all in Scotland.
The highest rates in England and Wales were Norwich (28%), Brighton and Hove, and
Cambridge (both 27%); these are all university towns.
Rate
"
Percentage with No Religion
" is contained within:
Themes, which organise the database into broad topics:
Entity ID |
Entity Name |
T_REL
|
Roots & Religion |
Rate
"
Percentage with No Religion
" contains no lower-level entities.