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Changing levels of religious observance through the life course (Religiosity in Switzerland:disentangling age, cohort and period effects) Marion Burkimsher Affiliated to University of Lausanne
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Outline Data Cohort - age - period trends Individual flux Further research and conclusion
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Outline Data Cohort - age - period trends Individual flux Further research and conclusion
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Data source: Swiss Household Panel Started in 1999 with 5074 households (12931 household members), ongoing to present Added additional respondents in 2004 (2538 households with 6569 household members) Annually revisit same respondents; children in household added to sample as they become old enough Religion questions asked each year 1999-2009, then dropped Questions on religious affiliation, religious attendance and prayer frequency Many other demographics, opinions, and time-dependent variables included Website: swisspanel.ch
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Data issues Many ‘missings’ - children not included, waves missing, individual dropouts (~15,000 total sampled min. once) With additional respondents added in 2004 no apparent discontinuity in trends - reassuring that pre-2004 sample had not become less representative over time Similar proportion of religious attenders as found in European Social Survey (ESS) - reassuring! (both managed by same organisation in Lausanne, FORS)
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Number of waves with valid data on attendance for individuals with data in at least 1 wave
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1 Never 2 Only family ceremonies 3 Only religious celebrations 4 Religious celebrations & family events 5 Few times/year 6 About once/month 7 Every 2 weeks 8 Once a week 9 Several times a week 1 Never 2 Occasional 3 Regular Recoding religious attendance (…any religion)
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1Never 2 Few times a year 3Once a month 4>once a week 5 Daily/almost daily 1 Never 2 Occasional 3 Frequent Recoding prayer frequency (prayer outside religious services)
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1 Protestant / Reformed 2 Roman Catholic 3 Christian Catholic 4 Other Christian 5 Jewish 6 Muslim 7 Other 8 No religion or denomination 1 Protestant 2 Catholic 3 Other 4 None Recoding religious affiliation
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Indications of secularisation Increase in % saying “no religion” from 11% to 16% 1999-2009 Overall decline in regular attenders from 27% to 22% Increase in proportion who never pray from 28% to 33%
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Outline Data Cohort - age - period trends Individual flux Further research and conclusion
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Trends in proportion who attend monthly+ 1999-2009
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Trends in proportion who never attend 1999-2009
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Summary of cohort-age-period attendance graphs Decline in within-cohort attendance rates -> period secularisation? Attendance decline especially marked amongst 1950s cohorts Cross-cohort differentials (esp. inter-generational non-replacement Decline in those who never attend -> age effect? Increase in proportion who occasionally attend
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Trends in proportion who pray frequently 1999-2009
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Trends in proportion who never pray 1999-2009
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Summary of cohort-age-period prayer graphs Increase in within-cohort frequent pray rates -> age effect? Cross-cohort differentials, esp. for <1940s cohorts Increase in those who never pray -> period effect? Slight decline in proportion who pray occasionally - opposite to attendance trend -> divergence / polarisation of prayer behaviour
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Trends in Protestant affiliation 1999-2009
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Trends in Catholic affiliation 1999-2009
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Trends in non-affiliation 1999-2009
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Summary of cohort-age-period affiliation graphs There are differences in proportion of Catholics and Protestants by cohort - explained by differential immigration or ???? Affiliation amongst Protestants is quite steady over time, except for some loss amongst 1960s cohorts Rise in Protestants amongst 1980s cohorts? Catholic affiliation shows declines across most cohorts, most severe amongst the youngest cohorts Significant increase in non-affiliation, though still minority
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Outline Data Cohort - age - period trends Individual flux Further research and conclusion
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Year-on-year change in religious attendance
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Individual flux in religious attendance 1999-2009 Respondents with data in >1 wave (N=9363)
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Comments The proportion of respondents who have stayed at the same level of religious attendance across all waves is 39% (for all respondents who have valid responses for >1 year) The proportion of respondents who have changed level of attendance at some stage is 61% The proportion of respondents who have at some time been regular attenders is 36% - cf. to annual average attendance rate of ~24% (includes respondents with only 1 wave of data) The proportion of respondents who at some stage have been ‘never’ attenders is 62%
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Individual flux in frequency of prayer 1999-2009 Respondents with data in >1 wave (N=9320)
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Comments The proportion of respondents who have stayed at the same level of prayer frequency across all waves is 50% ->Level of prayer is more stable than level of religious attendance The proportion of respondents who have changed frequency of prayer at some stage is 50% The proportion of respondents who have at some time have prayed frequently is 56% (cf. to annual average proportion of respondents who pray frequently ~45%) The proportion of respondents who at some stage have ‘never’ prayed is 47% The proportion who never attend (17%) is the same as the proportion who never pray (also 17%). However, of the respondents who regularly attend, 5% never pray! And of those who frequently pray, 22% never attend religious services!
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Flux in individual affiliation 1999-2009 Respondents with data in >1 wave (N=12,236) 84% had same affiliation at every wave observed
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Change in individual affiliation 1999 to 2009 Respondents with valid data in 1999 AND 2009 89% kept same affiliation (N=3348)
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Comments Religious affiliation is considerably more stable than level of attendance or frequency of prayer The main trend has been towards non-affiliation, more marked amongst Catholics
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Outline Data Age - period - cohort trends Individual flux Further research and conclusion
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Further research Should religiosity (especially attendance) be considered a ‘time-varying variable’? Rich data source to investigate further, eg. sequence analysis to investigate individual flux in religiosity over time Associate transitions of attendance with those of prayer and affiliation Investigate gender differences & other demographics Investigate increase / decrease in religiosity with life events, eg. partnering, separation, illness, birth of children, etc… Investigate if any association between change in religious attendance / prayer with change in life satisfaction Investigate effect of individual’s change in behaviour (eg. religious attendance) on rest of household Compare Swiss panel data with other countries’ data (eg. British Household Panel)
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Secularisation? It depends exactly what you look at, and where you draw the boundaries. An increasing proportion of occasional attenders (decline in regular attenders and decline in ‘never’ attenders) Non-attenders increasingly defining themselves as having no religion rather than affiliated to a denomination Growth in Protestantism amongst the young?
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Thank you!
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