Abstract
Building on Brown (1997) and Field's (2001) research into religious decline and secularisation in Scotland in the later decades of the 20th-century, this article uses data from recurrent social surveys, nationally-representative of the Scottish adult population, to assess the nature and extent of religious change in the 21st-century. It examines recent trends in religious affiliation and attendance in Scotland, compares key indicators in England and Scotland to assess areas of similarity and difference in terms of religion and secularity, and assesses the contemporary socio-demographic basis of affiliation and attendance in Scotland. The empirical results show that religious affiliation and attendance have further attenuated in Scotland in recent years, with a growing proportion of adults reporting that they were raised outside of any religious tradition. Indicators of secularity are most marked amongst younger age groups. The ‘haemorrhage of faith’ documented in the latter part of the 20th-century in Scotland has continued into the early part of the 21st-century.
Highlights
Scotland has traditionally been seen a religious nation within Great Britain, partly due to its Presbyterian traditions
Brown asserted that ‘religion in the late twentieth century is losing its place in Scottish society’ and further claimed that ‘The statistics provide a stark guide to Scottish secularisation’ (1997: 158)
Religious belonging and behaviour have further attenuated in Scotland in recent years, with a growing proportion of adults reporting that they were raised outside of any religious tradition
Summary
Scotland has traditionally been seen a religious nation within Great Britain, partly due to its Presbyterian traditions. These differences do not apply to those aged 75 and over, at least based on the survey data analysed so both men and women in this age group may be seen to be ‘carriers of religion’ in Scottish society. Around a quarter of 35-44 year olds said they were not raised within a religious tradition, increasing to nearly three-in-ten of those aged 25-34 and nearly two-fifths of the youngest age group
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