There's a lot of buzz about Christian revival among young adults in the UK & US. Perceptions of revival are fueled by results from opt-in online surveys. However, these surveys may be misleading. Surveys from random samples of the population don't show any clear evidence of revival.
My new post:
Posts by Stephanie Kramer
Researchers (including students) are invited to apply for funding for projects relying on Pew's recent global religion datasets. Details here: www.pewresearch.org/2026/01/16/s...
The writer/editor is a position within the Center’s Religion research team, which seeks to promote a deeper understanding of religion and spirituality. The Religion research team conducts surveys, demographic analyses and other social science research in the United States and around the world, studying people’s religious beliefs and practices as well as their views on related issues, including religion’s role in public life. The ideal candidate will have a strong data journalism mindset, with the ability to translate complex quantitative findings into clear and engaging narratives that are nonpartisan and non-advocacy. This position will be embedded within the Religion research team, where the writer/editor will work collaboratively to shape the team’s research agenda, including identifying key research questions; contributing to survey development; and synthesizing findings into accessible and compelling storylines. The writer/editor will also evaluate drafts of research reports to determine whether there are shortcomings in the analysis; edit, rewrite and reorganize drafts as necessary to improve flow and clarity; and work with researchers and designers to create appropriate charts and tables. In addition, the writer/editor will provide guidance and training to the Religion team’s researchers and serve as a writing resource. Following the release of reports, the writer/editor may help disseminate research to the public through the Center’s social media channels, videos, newsletters, and virtual or in-person gatherings, always adhering to the Center’s independent, nonpartisan, non-advocacy stance.
Please repost:
We're looking for an excellent writer/editor with strong data journalism skills to join the religion team at @pewresearch.org.
pewtrusts.wd5.myworkdayjobs.com/en-US/Center...
The religion team has an opening for a writer/editor with experience writing up complex quantitative findings for a general audience. Come work with us! pewtrusts.wd5.myworkdayjobs.com/en-US/Center...
So happy to see Matt's EXCELLENT paper out in the world. I originally agreed to pitch in with sermon transcript analyses largely because I have a soft spot for grad students with overly ambitious plans, and I'm so impressed by how it all turned out.
A grad school office mate summed me up once by saying, "Stephanie, you are the embodiment of calling a spade a spade." She did not mean it as a compliment.
"Influencers are central to this ambient news model. The creators who have the most impact on shaping public understanding of policy, science, and social or political issues today are often not political commentators or subject-matter experts at all." carnegieendowment.org/research/202...
Any influencers who'll never take a partisan or advocacy stance wanna team up with an expert whose awkward personality, middle-aged suburban mom status and penchant for taking being genuine too far make her a bad candidate for sharing research through short videos? 😬
Relatedly, we're producing this stuff in Word right up until it's ready to go online, lots of our published graphs were made in Excel, our academic journal access is pretty limited and there's a lot of excitement in the office when we get free smoothies or ice cream a couple of times a year. 😅
In my 9 years of chit chat about my work at Pew Research Center, people have consistently been surprised that:
- Pew is our benefactors' surname, not an acronym or reference to church seating
- Only around 170 of us are on staff (<100 researchers)
- As a 501c3, we give all of our work away for free
Map of United States of America shows 20 U.S. metro areas with the largest number of immigrants as of 2023. These include New York City, Los Angeles, Miami, Washington D.C. and Chicago. Circles over cities indicate size of immigrant population on a scale of 500,000 to 6 million.
A majority of U.S. immigrants are concentrated in only a dozen metro areas
www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/...
Stacked bar chart showing educational attainment by country or region of birth. Most regions show higher shares of people with Bachelor's degrees or more than for the U.S.-born, but 36% of all immigrants and 36% of all native-born adults age 25+ hold at least a Bachelor's degree.
Immigrants from most regions are more likely to hold a Bachelor's degree or higher than native-born adults in the U.S. Nearly 20% of U.S. workers are immigrants, but their numbers are declining.
The U.S. immigrant population grew at a record-breaking pace throughout the past few years but has shrunk since January, marking its first decline since the 1960s.
www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/...
@anagantman.bsky.social @jowylie.bsky.social and I are starting to study everyday revenge. Have you ever successfully gotten back at someone after being wronged? We would love to hear about it.
docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1F...
#PsychSciSky #socialpsyc #cognition
Also, slogans like "Save the Earth" are bad both because they're inaccurate and humans are self-interested creatures who aren't great at abstract concepts. The Earth doesn't need our help; it's seen many extinction events and always just keeps on keeping on. We're the ones who need saving.
I'd like to broaden this to "what really should be common knowledge but isn't" and point out that "life expectancy" is almost always shorthand for LE AT BIRTH. LE extends with age. A modest but literal majority of 70 year olds living in the U.S. today are expected to see 85.
3. The Bureau began work on Census 2030 in 2019. Counting hundreds of millions of people across a vast continent is a big lift. It doesn't seem feasible to accomplish this with the additional task of excluding certain immigrants by 2030.
2. Removing these immigrants would likely result in House seat losses for Florida, Texas and California. www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/...
Truth social post from @realDonaldTrump reads, "I have instructed our Department of Commerce to immediately begin work on a new and highly accurate CENSUS based on modern day facts and figures and, importantly, using the results and information gained from the Presidential Election of 2024. People who are in our Country illegally WILL NOT BE COUNTED IN THE CENSUS. Thank you for your attention to this matter!:
This post immediately brought 3 things to mind:
1. The Census Bureau's mission to count everyone is what enables us to study the size and characteristics of the unauthorized immigrant population.
I would love to be able to say exactly when I enter the podcast, but I've never been able to bring myself to listen to or watch my own interviews.
Soon after we released our report on the religious composition of migrants around the world last year, I had this conversation on BBC Four about our results and how the public discourse on the topic tends to shed more heat than light that's just as relevant today.
www.bbc.com/audio/play/m...
Where religiously unaffiliated people are in the majority
🇨🇳 China (90%)
🇨🇿 Czech Republic (73%)
🇰🇵 North Korea (73%)
🇭🇰 Hong Kong (71%)
🇲🇴 Macao (68%)
🇻🇳 Vietnam (68%)
🇯🇵 Japan (57%)
🇳🇱 Netherlands (54%)
🇺🇾 Uruguay (52%)
🇳🇿 New Zealand (51%)
www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/...
Well, well, well, if it isn't the religiously unaffiliated constituting about 28% of U.S. adults, just like in every one of the past several years.
www.pewresearch.org/methods/fact...
About 1 in 4 U.S. adults worry they or someone close to them could be deported.
www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2025/06/27/a...
Sankey graphs depicting movement of individual voters are my favorite
Hey there, Bluesky!
We are excited to share our data and insights here with you, and so are our researchers: go.bsky.app/3QzdR9p
What would you like to see from us? Drop suggestions below!
Applications close in one month. Please apply if you'd like to come work with us for the summer!
Our post election survey finds Democrats more pessimistic about their party's future than at any point in the past eight years: www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/...
Chart showing state vaccine requirements for enrollment in day care, child care or preschool.
Chart showing state vaccine requirements for enrollment in K-12 schools.
From the Pew Research Center archives (October 2021): "Republican- and Democratic-led states alike require hundreds of thousands of their citizens – infants, toddlers and schoolchildren, mostly – to be vaccinated against a panoply of diseases." www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/...