The geography of religious affiliation in Scotland

Pacione, Michael (2005) The geography of religious affiliation in Scotland. Professional Geographer, 57 (2). pp. 235-255. ISSN 0033-0124 (http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.0033-0124.2005.00475.x)

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Abstract

Academic study of the relationships between geography and religion constitutes a long-established subfield of cultural geography. The tradition is particularly strong in the United States where the seminal work of the Berkeley School stimulated a wealth of research on mapping the religious landscapes of North America. Religion has received far less attention within British human geography, due, in part, to the marginal position of religion within cultural geography and, in particular, to the absence of reliable, comprehensive data on religious affiliation. The present research overcomes these ideological and methodological obstacles to advance knowledge of the geography of religion in the United Kingdom. Employing data from the latest Census of Population, embedded within an established tradition of mapping geographies of religion, the research provides detailed analysis of the geography of religious affiliation in Scotland at the advent of the twenty-first century.