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The Future of the Global Muslim Population: Pro jections for 2010-2030” (January 2011). With the release of this report, we also are launching a . new website for the Pew-Templeton Global Religious Futures project that allows people to explore demographic data and survey results on religion in many countries around the world.
MN 5 Ilhan Omar D Continuing Muslim MN 6 Tom Emmer R Continuing Catholic. 7 PEW RESEARCH CENTER.
say it is very important to stop Muslim women from marrying outside their religion, and 76% say it is very important to stop Muslim men from doing so. Moreover, Indians generally stick to their own religious group when it comes to their friends. Hindus overwhelmingly say that most or all of their close friends are also Hindu. Of course,
(8% Muslim in 2016) could grow to 31% Muslim in the high scenario by 2050, compared with 21% in the medium scenario and 11% with no further Muslim migration. By contrast, the countries projected to experience the biggest changes in the medium scenario (such as the UK) tend to have been destinations for the highest numbers of regular Muslim ...
adults saying religion is “very important” in their lives compared with previous telephone polls. And the 2021 NPORS finds that 41% of U.S. adults now say religion is “very important” in their lives, 4 points lower than the 2020 NPORS and substantially lower than all of the Center’s earlier RDD readings on this question.
share of Russians identifying with a religion rose almost as much between 1998 and 2008 as it did 2 For the full results on these questions, see pages 12-14. 3 For more information on religion during the Soviet period, see Anderson, J. 1994. “Religion, State and Politics in the Soviet Union and Successor States.” Cambridge University Press.
1. Demographic portrait of Muslim Americans 30 2. Identity, assimilation and community 50 3. The Muslim American experience in the Trump era 66 4. Political and social views 84 5. Terrorism and concerns about extremism 96 6. Religious beliefs and practices 105 7. How the U.S. general public views Muslims and Islam 122 Appendix A: Glossary 131
1The 15% estimate is based on data from the Pew Forum’s 2009 report, “Mapping the Global Muslim Population”; other estimates based on data from the World Religion Database. Growth of Islam & Christianity in Sub-Saharan Africa Since 1900 Source: World Religion Database.
households, with the average Muslim individual residing in a home of 6.4 people, followed by Hindus at 5.7. Christians fall in the middle (4.5), forming relatively large families in sub-Saharan Africa and smaller ones in Europe. Buddhists (3.9), Jews (3.7) and the religiously unaffiliated (3.7) – defined as those who do not
1The 15% estimate is based on data from the Pew Forum’s 2009 report, “Mapping the Global Muslim Population”; other estimates based on data from the World Religion Database. Growth of Islam & Christianity in Sub-Saharan Africa Since 1900 Source: World Religion Database.