Key findings about the religious composition of India
Religious pluralism has long been a core value in India. A new report shows that India’s religious composition has been fairly stable since 1951.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Religious pluralism has long been a core value in India. A new report shows that India’s religious composition has been fairly stable since 1951.
Among religious groups, White evangelical Protestants continue to have the most positive opinion of Trump.
A majority of Americans say medication abortion should be legal, but there is a stark divide by age, religion and party affiliation.
The U.S. Muslim population has grown in the decades since 9/11, but views toward them have become increasingly polarized along political lines.
Most parents pass along religious and political affiliations, and they do so at similarly high rates, according to a new analysis of several surveys.
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.
Women continue to be less involved than men in mosque life in the U.S., but the pattern appears to be changing.
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.
Our new survey of 29,999 Indian adults takes a closer look at religious identity, nationalism and tolerance in Indian society.
Among India’s six largest religious groups, some are much more likely than others to abstain from eating meat.
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