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Pew Forum in the News

Selected news stories that cite the Pew Forum and its data.

AFP: Online Muslims outside the United States are more open to Western culture, Pew study finds
MUSLIMS outside the United States who use the internet are more likely to have a favorable opinion of Western popular culture than those who don't go online, the Pew Research Center said Friday.
Wash. Post: How the Internet is changing the Muslim world’s view of the West
The Internet can do many things — help mobilize massive social uprisings in the Arab Spring, raise thousands of dollars for needy girls in an online “flash mob” and drive 500 million people to watch “Charlie Bit Me.”
RNS: Want to improve Muslim attitudes? Get them online
(RNS) Want Muslims to have a better opinion of the United States? Get them on the Internet.
Catholic Reporter: Report on global Muslims reveals similarities with Catholicism
It’s always fascinating for me to interview those of other faith traditions and sometimes discover similarities with Catholicism. And Islam certainly has some similarities.
WBEZ 91.5: Report surveys over 38,000 Muslims worldwide on political and personal beliefs
From 2008-2012, the Pew Research Center surveyed over 38,000 Muslims around the world about their personal and political beliefs.
Atlantic: What Muslims around the world think about women's rights, in charts
We often talk about "the Islamic world," or the "Muslim community," but sometimes it takes being smacked with an enormous, amazing data dump to remind us that Muslims are actually an incredibly diverse group -- if you can call them a group -- who adhere to views that are informed by their cultural and political context as much as their religion.
USA Today: Report: Muslims back Islamic law, disagree on meaning
Devotion to Islam shapes the lives of most Muslims but their views on democracy, religious law known as sharia, and family life are varied, a new study finds.
Guardian: US Muslim opposition to suicide bombing revealed in extensive study

Muslims in the US are generally more opposed to suicide bombings than their co-religionists round the world, according to a new report by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life published Tuesday.

 

Reuters: World wide Muslim Pew survey shows majority want sharia but disagree on what to include, survey
Large majorities in the Muslim world want the Islamic legal and moral code of sharia as the official law in their countries, but they disagree on what it includes and who should be subject to it, an extensive new survey says.
LA Times: Survey: Many Muslims want sharia, but differ on what that means
In Afghanistan, Iraq and many other countries across the globe, most Muslims support making sharia, or Islamic law, the official law of the land, according to a sweeping survey released Tuesday by the Pew Research Center.
CNN: Survey: Muslims in North Caucasus concerned about ‘extremism’ within their faith
A majority of Muslims (57%) in Russia’s North Caucasus – including Chechnya, Dagestan and five other Russian jurisdictions – are either “very concerned” or “somewhat concerned” about religious extremist groups in their country, according to a Pew Research Center survey.
Post-Gazette: Pope Francis, a pleasant surprise
Many American Roman Catholics would like to see their church change.
CBS: Dolan: Pope Francis "a shot in the arm" for Catholic Church
Cardinal Timothy Dolan discusses the recent installation of Pope Francis and what the new papacy means for the Catholic Church and its future.
AFP: New pope wins over US Catholics: poll
His papacy has hardly begun, but 84 percent of Roman Catholics in the United States have a favorable view of Pope Francis, according to a Pew Research Center poll released Wednesday.
National Post: Graphic: Christianity then and now
More than 30% of the world’s population — 2.2 billion people — are Christian, according to a major religious survey.
LA Times: Roman Catholic Church feels Europe slipping from its hands
The timing said it all.
USA Today: Who can lead the Catholic world now?
Most of the world's billion Catholics live in Latin America, Africa and Asia now so the issues that dominate debate in the USA and Europe may not shape the papal election next month.
Reuters: Sex, power scandals to loom over Vatican pre-vote talks
The sex and power scandals haunting the Catholic Church look set to play a big role in meetings before next month's papal election after two senior cardinals called on Tuesday for more internal debate about them.
Huff. Post: Most Catholic countries worldwide, increase seen in global south
A recent analytical report by Pew Research Center, "The Global Catholic Population," indicates the countries with the highest Catholic population today, and how the global face of Catholicism has changed in the last century.
NPR: Catholic Church at crossroads: demographics, social issues pose challenges
When Pope Benedict XVI said he was stepping down, he broke a tradition that had been in place since 1415.
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