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Home Research Topics Religion Religious Demographics
Pew Research CenterMay 8, 2015
Chapter 4: The Shifting Religious Identity of Demographic Groups

Immigrants Arriving in the 1990s and Later More Likely to Identify as “Nones”

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Chapter 4: The Shifting Religious Identity of Demographic Groups
Religious Composition of Generational Cohorts
Growing Proportion of Unaffiliated Across Racial and Ethnic Groups
Christians Decline, “Nones” Grow as Share of Both Native Born and Immigrants
Immigrants Arriving in the 1990s and Later More Likely to Identify as “Nones”
Both College Graduates and Those With Less Education Becoming More Unaffiliated
Growing Proportion of Unaffiliated Adults Across All Income Categories
Women More Likely Than Men to Identify as Christians; Men More Likely Than Women to Be Unaffiliated
Fewer Christians Among Both Married, Unmarried
Sharpest Growth of Religious “Nones” Among Those Living With a Partner, Never Married
All Regions Becoming Less Christian, More Religiously Unaffiliated
Religious Composition by Self-Reported Sexual Identity

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