Pew Research Center’s surveys of Muslims’ opinions, published in 2010 and 2013, reported the percentages of those in each country who favored or opposed sharia or harsh elements of sharia.[1, 2, 3] However, Pew did not estimate the numbers and mean percentages of Muslims over all surveyed countries who favored or opposed those items. In the ongoing debates about the extent of hardline fundamentalist beliefs held by Muslims, it is critically important to have scientifically-based estimates of these numbers and percentages. Consequently, some laypersons, journalists, and activists have attempted to make their own estimates, based on Pew’s findings. In the present article, I will use the Pew survey data sets [4] as well as Pew’s estimates of the age structure of Muslim populations [5] in the countries surveyed, to estimate the appropriate numbers and population-weighted percentages.
I will examine Pew’s data for questions concerning the death penalty for leaving Islam, stoning of adulterers, whippings and cutting off of hands as punishments, making sharia the official law of the nation, and “honor” killings. I will also examine Pew’s data for two questions that measured attitudes towards women’s rights and freedom, specifically whether a wife “must always obey” her husband and whether a wife should have the right to divorce her husband. Results for additional questions relevant to extremism, including support for specific terrorist groups, will be examined in subsequent articles. Complete and exact wording for the questions and response options quoted below is taken from the Questionnaire file in the relevant Dataset folder.
All results reported in the analyses below are for the general samples of adult Muslims surveyed by Pew. Using Pew’s age structure estimates for the Muslim population in each country for 2010, I’ve estimated the country population sizes for Muslims 18 years of age or older [shown in Appendix A]. I’ve then used those estimates to calculate the population-weighted percentages for the response choices. Following Pew’s “Instructions for Downloading Datasets,” I’ve applied their weight variable in the analyses within individual countries. Using the freely-available statistical software PSPP, plus a common spreadsheet, readers can verify the results obtained here by analyzing the relevant data files made available to the public by Pew. In Appendix B, and in Analysis 5 (“Honor killings”), I describe some procedures in PSPP for analyzing these data files.
Results for Thailand, shown in The World’s Muslims (2013) report, are not included in the present analyses because they are not nationally representative; Pew surveyed only that country’s five southernmost provinces. Data for Algeria are in Pew’s data file but were not included here due to their relatively low (75%) national representativeness (see the Codebook pdf, page 3, in The World’s Muslims 2012 Dataset folder).
For practical reasons, I did not attempt to formally estimate the margins of error for the combined samples analyzed here, but I discuss them briefly and make rough estimates, with caveats, in Appendix C. Given the large sizes of the combined samples (6688, 27385, 28894, 34744, and 35199), and other considerations, I don’t regard margin of error as a major concern in this article.
Analyses
1.0 Summary of Analyses 1.1 to 4
Support for and opposition to harsh sharia punishments and making sharia the official law of the nation.
Table 1.0
Muslims’ Support for and Opposition
to Harsh Punishments and Sharia as National Law
|
||||||
Survey
|
Item
|
Percentage
|
Number
of
|
Combined
|
||
Report
|
Favor
|
Oppose
|
Dk/Ref
|
countries
|
sample n
|
|
Pew
|
death penalty for
apostasy
|
48
|
47
|
5
|
7
|
6688
|
Global
|
stoning of adulterers
|
56
|
40
|
4
|
7
|
6688
|
2010
|
whippings and cutting off
hands
|
53
|
43
|
4
|
7
|
6688
|
Pew
|
death penalty for
apostasy
|
39
|
54
|
6
|
36
|
34744
|
World's
|
stoning of adulterers
|
51
|
43
|
6
|
36
|
34744
|
Muslims
|
whippings and cutting off
hands
|
50
|
46
|
5
|
36
|
34744
|
2013
|
sharia as law of the
nation
|
69
|
24
|
7
|
36
|
35166
|
Notes.
Percentages are weighted by countries’ Muslim adult population sizes. Samples
are of Muslim adults.
|
||||||
Datasets: Pew
Global Attitudes 2010, Pew Africa Survey 2009, Pew The World’s Muslims 2012.
|
1. Death Penalty for Apostasy
1.1. Survey Report: Pew Global Attitudes, 2010b, “Muslim Publics Divided on Hamas and Hezbollah,” (Q108d, page 35). Combined 7-country Muslim sample size = 6688.
Q108. “Do you favor or oppose making the following the law in (survey country)? … d. Death penalty for people who leave the Muslim religion”
Table 1.1
Q108. Do you favor
or oppose making the following the law in (survey country)?
… d. Death penalty
for people who leave the Muslim religion
|
|||||
Favor
|
Oppose
|
Don't Know
|
Refused
|
Total
|
|
Population
|
180651065
|
175147300
|
17645489
|
2248145
|
375692000
|
Percentage
|
48.08
|
46.62
|
4.70
|
0.60
|
100.00
|
Notes:
Seven-country population is of Muslims age 18 and older. Displayed numbers
are rounded.
|
|||||
Data Source: Pew
Global Attitudes, 2010 Dataset.
|
Comments:
1. As
shown in Table 1.1, the seven-country population-weighted percentage of Muslims
18 years of age or older who favored death for apostasy is 48.08. The
comparable figure for the seven-country all-ages Muslim population is 49.79%
and for the seven-country age 15-and-older Muslim population is 48.40%.
2. An
alternative though slightly less accurate method for estimating the 2010 age ≥
18 Muslim populations uses (a) the U.N.’s published estimates for the general
(not religion-specific) age ≥ 18 population for each country, multiplied by (b)
Pew’s published estimates of the proportions of Muslims (not age-specific) in
each country. Using these estimates, the above seven-country
population-weighted percentage of Muslim adults who favor death for apostasy is
48.14.
1.2. Survey Report: Pew “The World’s Muslims,” 2013 (Q92b, page 219), also includes results from Pew “Sub-Saharan” 2010a (Q95c, page 291). Combined 36-country Muslim sample size = 34744.
Countries Included in /Excluded from the Analysis: 36 included, Thailand excluded.
Q92. “Do you favor or oppose the following? … b. the death penalty for people who leave the Muslim religion”
Table 1.2
Q92. Do you favor
or oppose the following: … b. the death penalty for people who leave the
Muslim religion?
|
|||||
Favor
|
Oppose
|
Don't Know
|
Refused
|
Total
|
|
Population
|
236811546
|
325531116
|
33706500
|
4724438
|
600773600
|
Percentage
|
39.42
|
54.19
|
5.61
|
0.79
|
100.00
|
Notes:
36-country population is of Muslims age 18 and older. Displayed numbers are
rounded.
|
|||||
Data Sources:
Pew Research, Africa Survey 2009 and The World’s Muslims 2012 Datasets.
|
Comments:
1. As
shown in Table 1.2, the 36-country population-weighted percentage of Muslims ≥
18 years of age who favored the death penalty for apostasy is 39.42. The
comparable figure for the 36-country all-ages Muslim population is 40.57%, and
for the 36-country age ≥ 15 years Muslim population is 39.64%. I suspect that
39.42% is a slight underestimate of the level of expressed support for Q92b for
Muslim adults in the survey period (late 2008 to early 2012), but not far off. Using
the U.N. × Pew method of estimation (described above in Comment 2 under Table
1.1), the 36-country population-weighted percentage of Muslim adults who favor
death for apostasy is 39.11.
2. Multiplying
the “favor” proportion obtained from the 36-country population by the estimated
2010 world population of Muslim adults (age ≥ 18, see Appendix A) gives us
0.394177684 × 954481153 = 376,235,170.
3. If the Q92b result for Thailand was
included in my calculation of the mean population-weighted percentage of Muslim
adults in favor of death for apostasy (a 37-country sample), it would drop very
slightly from 39.42% to 39.35%. The mean would rise to 40.13% if Algeria's
apostasy result was also included (a 38-country sample).
2. Stoning of Adulterers
2.1. Survey Report: Pew Global Attitudes, 2010b, “Muslim Publics Divided…” (Q108c, page 35). Combined 7-country Muslim sample size = 6688.
Q108 “Do you favor or oppose making the following the law in (survey country)? … c. Stoning people who commit adultery”
Table 2.1
Q108. Do you favor
or oppose making the following the law in (survey country)?
… c. Stoning people
who commit adultery
|
|||||
Favor
|
Oppose
|
Don't Know
|
Refused
|
Total
|
|
Population
|
209493782
|
149675855
|
14288223
|
2234140
|
375692000
|
Percentage
|
55.76
|
39.84
|
3.80
|
0.59
|
100.00
|
Notes:
Seven-country population is of Muslims age 18 and older. Displayed numbers
are rounded.
|
|||||
Data Source: Pew
Global Attitudes, 2010 Dataset.
|
2.2. Survey Report: Pew “The World’s Muslims,” 2013
(Q92d, page 221), includes some results from Pew “Sub-Saharan Africa” 2010a
(Q95e, page 293). Combined 36-country Muslim sample size = 34744.
Countries Included in or Excluded from the Analysis: 36 included, Thailand excluded.
Q92. “Do you favor or oppose the following? … d. stoning people who commit adultery”
Table 2.2
Q92. Do you favor or oppose the
following: …d. stoning people who commit adultery?
|
|||||
Favor
|
Oppose
|
Don't
Know
|
Refused
|
Total
|
|
Population
|
306014063
|
258513394
|
29205305
|
7040838
|
600773600
|
Percentage
|
50.94
|
43.03
|
4.86
|
1.17
|
100.00
|
Notes:
36-country population is of Muslims age 18 and older. Displayed numbers are
rounded.
|
|||||
Data Sources:
Pew Research, Africa Survey 2009 and The World’s Muslims 2012 Datasets.
|
3. Punishments Like Whippings and Cutting Off of Hands for Crimes Like Theft and Robbery
Survey Report: Pew Global Attitudes, 2010b, “Muslim Publics Divided on Hamas and Hezbollah,” (Q108b, page 35). Combined 7-country Muslim sample size = 6688.
Q108. “Do you favor or oppose making the following the law in (survey country)? … b. Punishments like whippings and cutting off of hands for crimes like theft and robbery”
Table 3.1.
Q108. Do you favor
or oppose making the following the law in (survey country)?
… b. Punishments
like whippings and cutting off of hands for crimes like theft and robbery
|
|||||
Favor
|
Oppose
|
Don't Know
|
Refused
|
Total
|
|
Population
|
198765675
|
162968130
|
12305379
|
1652816
|
375692000
|
Percentage
|
52.91
|
43.38
|
3.28
|
0.44
|
100.00
|
Notes:
Seven-country population is of Muslims age 18 and older. Displayed numbers
are rounded.
|
|||||
Data Source: Pew
Global Attitudes, 2010 Dataset.
|
3.2. Survey Reports: Pew “The World’s Muslims,” 2013
(Q92c, page 220) and Pew “Sub-Saharan Africa,” 2010a (Q95d, page 292). Combined
36-country Muslim sample size = 34744.
Countries Included in or Excluded from the Analysis: 36 included, Thailand excluded.
Q92. “Do you favor or oppose the following? … c. punishments like whippings and cutting off of hands for crimes like theft and robbery”
Table 3.2
Q92. Do you favor
or oppose the following: …c. punishments like whippings and cutting off
of hands for crimes
like theft and robbery?
|
|||||
Favor
|
Oppose
|
Don't
Know
|
Refused
|
Total
|
|
Population
|
298187526
|
273862422
|
24064991
|
4658660
|
600773600
|
Percentage
|
49.63
|
45.58
|
4.01
|
0.78
|
100.00
|
Notes:
36-country population is of Muslims age 18 and older. Displayed numbers are
rounded.
|
|||||
Data Sources:
Pew Research, Africa Survey 2009 and The World’s Muslims 2012 Datasets.
|
4. Making Sharia (Islamic Law) the Official Law of the Land in the Country
Q79a (page 201) in Pew’s (2013) The World’s Muslims, full report; and Q95a (page 289) in Pew’s (2010a) “Sub-Saharan Africa” full report. Combined 36-country Muslim sample size = 35166.
Countries included or excluded: See Comments below Table 4.
Q79 “Do you favor or oppose a. making the sharia, or Islamic law, the official law of the land in our country?”
Table 4
Q79. Do you favor
or oppose a. making the sharia, or Islamic law, the official law of the land
in our country?
|
|||||
Favor
|
Oppose
|
Don't
Know
|
Refused
|
Total
|
|
Population
|
420564114
|
146095099
|
33217272
|
11235515
|
611112000
|
Percentage
|
68.82
|
23.91
|
5.44
|
1.84
|
100.00
|
Notes:
36-country population is of Muslims age 18 and older. Displayed numbers are
rounded.
|
|||||
Data Sources:
Pew Research, Africa Survey 2009 and The World’s Muslims 2012 Datasets.
|
Comment about Table 4: The total population here
differs from that of the Q92 series because Morocco (standard Q79a) is included
and Russia is excluded.
Excluded countries with non-standard wording were Iran, Russia, and Thailand. In Russia and Thailand the wording was modified to refer to the prospect of making sharia the law within specific regions within the country instead of the country as whole, e.g., in Russia, (Q79aRUS) “…the Muslim Republics of Russia,” and in Thailand, (Q79aTHA) “…the provinces where the Muslim population forms a majority.” In Iran, the sharia question was as follows: (Q80) “Do you favor or oppose the implementation of the sharia, or Islamic law in our country?”
Results for the excluded countries (% favor, oppose, dk/ref): Iran 83, 15, 2; Russia 42, 37, 21; Thailand 77, 11, 12.
5. “Honor” Killing of Either a Male or Female
This analysis combines male and female honor killing responses into one response set.
Survey Report: Pew, “The World’s Muslims,” 2013, full report (see Q53 and Q54, page 190). Combined 23-country Muslim sample size = 28894.
Countries Included in or Excluded from the Analysis: 23 included, Thailand excluded. Niger is included here, as it is in the data set with the other countries surveyed between 2011 and 2012, though Pew (2013) did not report it on page 190.
Q54 “Some people think that if a woman engages in premarital sex or adultery, it is justified for family members to end her life in order to protect the family’s honor. Others believe that this practice is not justified, no matter the circumstances. Do you personally feel that this practice is often justified to defend the family honor, sometimes justified, rarely justified, or never justified?”
Q53 asks about killing a male family member. It has the same wording as Q54, except that it uses “man” and “his.” In the alternative version (Q53AIU and Q54AIU) fielded in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Uzbekistan, the phrase “brings dishonor to his/her family” was used instead of the standard “engages in premarital sex or adultery.”
Pew’s response code: 1 = often justified, 2 = sometimes justified, 3 = rarely justified, 4 = never justified, 8 = don’t know, 9 = refused
My classification: moderate option = 4, clear extremist option <= 2.
Comment: The response that honor killings are “rarely justified” is, in my opinion, not moderate. The “rarely justified” response indicates extremism, but not as strongly compared to the “often” or “sometimes justified” options. The criteria for categorizing a response as “extremist” should be fairly stringent in these analyses, so I decided not to lump “rarely” with “often” or “sometimes.”
Setting up for a combined analysis of two (or more) questions requires some familiarity with software that can be used to compute new variables out of existing variables. In Appendix B, I describe briefly how to create a filter variable in PSPP. Those instructions are also applicable to computing variables for the combined analysis of Q53 and Q54. Here are some brief instructions for doing the combined analysis with PSPP:
Select Transform, then Compute Variable. Write the variable label and numeric expression (see below). Each numeric expression makes a binary variable, scoring 1 (one) for cases that fit the criteria and 0 (zero) for cases that do not. Expressions for the alternative versions Q53AIU and Q54AIU follow the same pattern as for Q53 and Q54. To obtain the percentages, enter the newly computed variables instead of the original variables into the Crosstab analysis.
Numeric Expressions:
Often or sometimes justified for one or the other or both: (Q53 <= 2) | (Q54 <= 2)
Rarely for both: (Q53 = 3) & (Q54 = 3)
Never and rarely, or vice versa: ((Q53 = 4) & (Q54 = 3)) | ((Q53 = 3) & (Q54 = 4))
Never for both: (Q53 = 4) & (Q54 = 4)
Table 5
“Honor” Killing: Combined Analysis of Responses
to Questions 53 (man) and 54 (woman).
“Some people think that if a man/woman engages in
premarital sex or adultery, it is justified for family members to end his/her
life in order to protect the family’s honor. Others believe that this
practice is not justified, no matter the circumstances. Do you personally
feel that this practice is often justified to defend the family honor,
sometimes justified, rarely justified, or never justified?”
|
||||||
Percentage
|
Population
|
|||||
Often/
|
Both
|
One
Rarely,
|
Both
|
Remainder
|
||
Sometimes
|
Rarely
|
One Never
|
Never
|
|||
Afghanistan*
|
66
|
6
|
6
|
19
|
3
|
14581600
|
Iraq*
|
62
|
6
|
6
|
19
|
7
|
15698400
|
Egypt
|
48
|
10
|
21
|
14
|
7
|
47868400
|
Jordan
|
43
|
2
|
23
|
31
|
2
|
3347200
|
Pakistan
|
42
|
3
|
2
|
42
|
10
|
97540000
|
Palestin. T.
|
41
|
7
|
4
|
40
|
8
|
1989600
|
Lebanon
|
41
|
6
|
5
|
43
|
4
|
1816000
|
Bangladesh
|
40
|
16
|
6
|
31
|
7
|
83462000
|
Niger
|
36
|
17
|
1
|
37
|
9
|
6741600
|
Uzbekistan*
|
32
|
7
|
10
|
41
|
10
|
17083200
|
Tajikistan
|
31
|
10
|
10
|
41
|
8
|
3741200
|
Tunisia
|
29
|
6
|
6
|
54
|
5
|
7416400
|
Kyrgyzstan
|
23
|
11
|
9
|
49
|
9
|
2933200
|
Russia
|
22
|
6
|
5
|
54
|
12
|
10832400
|
Turkey
|
21
|
3
|
5
|
63
|
8
|
48730000
|
Malaysia
|
21
|
8
|
3
|
55
|
12
|
11069200
|
Kosovo
|
20
|
13
|
3
|
57
|
6
|
1107200
|
Albania
|
18
|
8
|
3
|
64
|
6
|
1846800
|
Morocco
|
16
|
3
|
5
|
57
|
18
|
21170800
|
Indonesia
|
9
|
8
|
3
|
79
|
1
|
141766400
|
Bosnia-Hrz.
|
8
|
9
|
4
|
76
|
2
|
1362800
|
Azerbaijan
|
8
|
2
|
5
|
79
|
6
|
6556800
|
Kazakhstan
|
6
|
4
|
7
|
78
|
5
|
7558000
|
Population
|
164575214
|
43746320
|
31666985
|
279492613
|
36738069
|
556219200
|
Pop.-Wtd. %
|
29.59
|
7.86
|
5.69
|
50.25
|
6.60
|
100.00
|
Notes.
23-country population is of Muslims age 18 and older. Displayed numbers are
rounded.
|
||||||
Data Source: Pew
Research, The World’s Muslims 2012 Dataset.
|
||||||
*In Afghanistan,
Iraq, and Uzbekistan, the phrase “brings dishonor to his/her family” was used
instead of “engages in premarital sex or adultery.”
|
6. Whether a Wife Must Always Obey Her Husband
Survey Report: Pew, The World’s Muslims, 2013, full report, Q78, page 200. Combined 23-country Muslim sample size = 28894.
Countries Included/ Excluded: 23 included, Niger included, Thailand excluded.
Q78 “Now I am going to read you a statement. Please tell me if you completely agree with it, mostly agree with it, mostly disagree with it or completely disagree with it: A wife must always obey her husband.”
Table 6
Q78. Please tell me if you completely
agree, mostly agree, mostly disagree or
completely disagree: A wife must
always obey her husband.
|
|||||||
Completely
|
Mostly
|
Mostly
|
Completely
|
Don’t
|
Refused
|
Total
|
|
agree
|
agree
|
disagree
|
disagree
|
know
|
|||
Population
|
305176143
|
172199148
|
44689038
|
21515340
|
9521618
|
3117913
|
556219200
|
Percentage
|
54.87
|
30.96
|
8.03
|
3.87
|
1.71
|
0.56
|
100.00
|
Notes.
23-country population is of Muslims age 18 and older. Displayed numbers are
rounded.
|
|||||||
Data Source: Pew
Research, The World’s Muslims 2012 Dataset.
|
Comment on Table 6: About 86% agree at least mostly,
and about 12% disagree at least mostly, that a wife “must always obey” her
husband.
7. Whether a Wife Should Have the Right to Divorce Her Husband
Survey Report: Pew, The World’s Muslims, 2013, full report, Q77, page 199. Combined 22-country Muslim sample size = 27385.
Countries Included or Excluded: 22 included, Niger included, Afghanistan excluded (Q77 was not asked there), Thailand excluded.
Q77 “I will read you two statements, please tell me which comes closer to your view, even if neither is exactly right.
1—A
wife should have the right to divorce her husband
OR
2—A
wife should not have the right to divorce her husband”
Table
7
Q77. “I will read you two statements,
please tell me which comes closer to your view, even if neither is exactly
right.”
|
||||||
A
wife should have the right to divorce her husband
|
A
wife should not have the right to divorce her husband
|
Neither/
depends (vol.)
|
Don’t
know
|
Refused
|
Total
|
|
Population
|
236244564
|
243407513
|
41359315
|
15968599
|
4657609
|
541637600
|
Percentage
|
43.62
|
44.94
|
7.64
|
2.95
|
0.86
|
100.00
|
Notes. 22-country
population is of Muslims age 18 and older. Displayed numbers are rounded.
|
||||||
Data Source: Pew
Research, The World’s Muslims 2012 Dataset.
|
Comment: A plurality (45%) says that a wife should not
have the right to divorce. An additional 8% volunteered answers that Pew
categorized as “neither/depends.”
Discussion
Since the
terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, people in the general publics of the West have debated about the prevalence of extremist or hardline fundamentalist
views in the world’s Muslim population. Pew’s (2013) survey evidence happens to
be relevant to these debates because Pew asked multiple questions about harsh
fundamentalist views and sampled a broad range of countries and vast numbers of
Muslim adults. The analyses reported here on Pew’s data indicate that
majorities, pluralities, and large minorities of Muslim adults, in vast numbers
across many countries, favor extremely harsh fundamentalist practices and agree
with severe restrictions on the rights and freedoms of women. A substantial
majority (69%) of Muslim adults favors making sharia the law of their country.
How representative of Muslim adults generally are
these results? Pew’s 36-country
sample that was asked the three harsh punishment questions was very diverse and
represents roughly 60% of the world’s Muslim adults. It is probably reasonable
to expect that the percentages in favor of such harsh punishments would be close
to but slightly higher for the remaining 40% who were not surveyed or not asked
those questions. Pew (2013, pp. 147-149) was not able to survey some countries,
or did not ask some questions in some surveyed countries, due to cultural hypersensitivities,
safety and security concerns, active conflict, and/or government restrictions. Overall, those factors suggest that the sample Pew did obtain was biased toward more “moderate”
views. According to Pew (2013), “In some countries, pretest results indicated
the need to suppress certain questions to avoid offending respondents and/or
risking the security of the interviewers. In other countries, interviewers
considered some questions too sensitive to pretest.” (p. 147). Pew (2013) did not ask the three harsh sharia
punishment questions in Iran, Morocco, or Uzbekistan; did not survey India, the
GCC (Saudi Arabia, UAE, et al.), Sudan, Yemen, China, Syria, Burkina Faso, Somalia,
Guinea, Ivory Coast, or Libya. The 75% nationally representative data for
Algeria, not included in Pew’s (2013) report, indicated that clear majorities there
favored each of the three harsh punishments. India’s Muslims were not surveyed
because Pew determined that their questions would be deemed too sensitive
to ask there.
Disclaimer
Pew Research is not responsible for
my analyses or my interpretation of their data. From the Pew instructions for
downloading data sets: “All manuscripts, articles, books, and other papers and
publications using our data should reference the Pew Research Center’s Religion
& Public Life Project as the source of the data and should acknowledge that
the Pew Research Center bears no responsibility for the interpretations
presented or conclusions reached based on analysis of the data.”
References and Notes
[1] Tolerance and Tension: Islam and Christianity in
Sub-Saharan Africa, Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life (April, 2010), full
report pdf. http://www.pewresearch.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/7/2010/04/sub-saharan-africa-full-report.pdf
[2] Muslim Publics Divided on Hamas and Hezbollah, Pew
Research Center Global Attitudes Project (December 2, 2010) http://www.pewglobal.org/2010/12/02/muslims-around-the-world-divided-on-hamas-and-hezbollah/
[3] The World’s Muslims: Religion, Politics and
Society, Pew Research Center (April 30, 2013), full report pdf http://www.pewforum.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/7/2013/04/worlds-muslims-religion-politics-society-full-report.pdf
[4] The corresponding data sets drawn from here for
the analyses include the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life’s Sub-Saharan Africa Survey, Pew Global Attitudes Spring 2010 Survey Dataset, and Pew Religion’s The World's Muslims Dataset 2012. These data set packages contain multiple files in addition to
the data files proper, such as a Codebook and detailed Questionnaire.
[5] Pew’s religion-specific age structure estimates
for 2010 can be obtained through the following interactive website: http://globalreligiousfutures.org/countries.
A detailed report for these estimates is in The Global Religious Landscape: A
Report on the Size and Distribution of Major Religious Groups as of 2010, The
Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life (December, 2012) http://www.pewforum.org/2012/12/18/global-religious-landscape-exec/ (see Full Report pdf and other supporting documents).
Appendix A
Estimating the Age 18-and-Over Muslim Populations
In its opinion surveys examined here, Pew surveyed
only Muslim adults, i.e., those 18 years of age or older. However, many authors
who try to estimate the numbers and population-weighted percentages of Muslims who hold extremist
views use in their calculations the entire (all-ages) populations of Muslims in
each country surveyed. That is questionable for at least two reasons. First, we don’t know how closely the
responses of younger teens and children would match those of the adults at the
time of the survey. Also, obviously, it would not make sense to generalize
these results to infants and toddlers. Second,
there are big differences between countries in age structure (or age
distribution). For example, the 0-14 age group makes up about 46% of the Muslim
population in Afghanistan but only about 26% in Turkey.
To ignore these differences and use the overall all-ages Muslim populations for
each country to weight the percentages of Muslims who hold a particular view
would result in estimates that are less accurate than those that use the age ≥ 18 Muslim
population sizes to weight the percentages.
From what I've seen, the previous estimates of the percentages of Muslims who hold particular views also make use of
the rounded percentages displayed in Pew’s published tables and figures. Estimates based on rounded figures will be somewhat inaccurate. To improve the accuracy of the estimates,
percentages (or proportions) displayed to several decimal places can be
obtained easily from the data sets that Pew has published (see Appendix B, below). Original figures
accurate to several decimal places are also useful in maintaining a high degree
of accuracy in intermediate calculations and in checking for errors.
Another type of estimate of the percentage of Muslims
favoring harsh sharia punishments uses only the subset of respondents who favor
both sharia as the official law of the nation (as phrased in Q79a, in Pew,
2013, The World’s Muslims) and the specific harsh sharia punishment, such as
the death penalty for apostasy. Authors who make this type of estimate perhaps assume
that they can ignore the respondents who opposed, or who gave no definite
response to, the prospect of making sharia the law of country. That assumption
is incorrect, because there is in fact a significant minority of respondents
who either opposed sharia (as presented in Q79a) or indicated that they didn’t
know, but who favored specific harsh sharia punishments. In addition, some authors
assume that only respondents who favored sharia as the national law (Q79a)
were asked about the specific harsh punishments for apostasy, theft, and
adultery. That assumption is also incorrect, as I confirmed
with the primary researcher and—as readers can confirm—by checking the data
file. In countries where the sharia question and the three questions about the
harsh sharia punishments were asked, all Muslim respondents were asked all four
of these questions. Hence, those who make these errors underestimate the total
percentages of Muslims who favor harsh punishments.
Pew [5] published
religion-specific age structure estimates for many countries, including those
surveyed. However, those estimates are in groupings for ages 0-14, 15-29, etc.;
they did not make an age ≥ 18 group. That limitation will be dealt with, with
sufficient accuracy for the present purposes, by using Pew’s published age
group numbers to estimate the numbers of Muslims 18 years of age and older. I
made a linear estimation that uses the simple assumption that there are equal
increments of difference between each single-year age group’s population and
the one adjacent to it. With that assumption, one can use Pew’s published
population size estimates for the age 0-14 and age 15-29 groups, and the age ≥
15 group, to estimate the size of the age ≥ 18 group. There will be a very slight
loss of accuracy using a linear estimation, but that loss should be small
enough that it does not have a significant impact on the results reported here.
The linear method I describe below is quick and easy to use in a spreadsheet.
Step 1: Find d,
the mean increment of population difference from a single-year age group to the
next. The formula for d = [(x / 15) – (y / 15)] / 15, where x is the population
size of the age 15-29 group, y is the population size of the age 0-14 group, 15
is the number of years in each age group, and 15 is also the number of
differences from one year to the next (adjacent) year between ages 22 and 7.
Ages 22 and 7 are the median years of their respective age groups.
Step 2: Find the population sizes of the age 17, 16,
and 15 (single-year) groups, respectively. The numbers of single-year
increments from 22 for each of those groups are 5, 6, and 7 respectively. Hence
the population size for the age 17 group = (x / 15) + (d × 5), for the age 16
group = (x / 15) + (d × 6), and for the age 15 group = (x / 15) + (d × 7).
Step 3: Obtain the sum of the age 17, age 16, and age 15
populations.
Step 4: Subtract the sum of the age 17, 16, and 15
populations from the age ≥ 15 population. The result is the linear estimate of
the age ≥ 18 population.
The justification for weighting response percentages
by the population sizes of the countries should be clear from a perusal of
Table A1. The adult Muslim populations of some countries are many times larger
than those of others. (Indonesia's adult Muslim population here is about 590 times the size of Liberia's). To estimate the percentages
of Muslim adults holding particular views, it is important to take these
country population sizes into account. However, if our interest were, for
example, to compare the different countries
according to their percentages of Muslim adults holding particular views, it could
make sense to give countries equal weight.
Table A1
Estimated*
Muslim Population Sizes Based on Pew’s 2010 Age Structure Numbers
|
|||||||
Age Group
|
|||||||
≤ 14 yrs.
|
17 yrs.*
|
16 yrs.*
|
15 yrs.*
|
15+16+17*
|
≥ 15 yrs.
|
≥ 18 yrs.*
|
|
Afghanistan
|
14,550,000
|
706,444
|
732,800
|
759,156
|
2,198,400
|
16,780,000
|
14,581,600
|
Albania
|
600,000
|
44,889
|
44,400
|
43,911
|
133,200
|
1,980,000
|
1,846,800
|
Azerbaijan
|
1,880,000
|
161,333
|
157,733
|
154,133
|
473,200
|
7,030,000
|
6,556,800
|
Bangladesh
|
42,750,000
|
2,723,333
|
2,736,000
|
2,748,667
|
8,208,000
|
91,670,000
|
83,462,000
|
Bosnia-Hrz.
|
270,000
|
22,889
|
22,400
|
21,911
|
67,200
|
1,430,000
|
1,362,800
|
Cameroon
|
1,660,000
|
80,000
|
83,067
|
86,133
|
249,200
|
1,930,000
|
1,680,800
|
Chad
|
2,820,000
|
138,222
|
143,200
|
148,178
|
429,600
|
3,390,000
|
2,960,400
|
DR Congo
|
470,000
|
21,556
|
22,533
|
23,511
|
67,600
|
500,000
|
432,400
|
Djibouti
|
310,000
|
18,444
|
18,667
|
18,889
|
56,000
|
550,000
|
494,000
|
Egypt
|
24,500,000
|
1,530,222
|
1,540,533
|
1,550,844
|
4,621,600
|
52,490,000
|
47,868,400
|
Ethiopia
|
12,890,000
|
637,111
|
659,333
|
681,556
|
1,978,000
|
15,800,000
|
13,822,000
|
Ghana
|
1,560,000
|
80,000
|
82,400
|
84,800
|
247,200
|
2,300,000
|
2,052,800
|
Guinea-Biss.
|
290,000
|
14,889
|
15,333
|
15,778
|
46,000
|
390,000
|
344,000
|
Indonesia
|
56,060,000
|
3,767,556
|
3,764,533
|
3,761,511
|
11,293,600
|
153,060,000
|
141,766,400
|
Iran
|
16,900,000
|
1,488,000
|
1,451,867
|
1,415,733
|
4,355,600
|
56,680,000
|
52,324,400
|
Iraq
|
13,540,000
|
681,778
|
703,867
|
725,956
|
2,111,600
|
17,810,000
|
15,698,400
|
Jordan
|
2,260,000
|
132,444
|
134,267
|
136,089
|
402,800
|
3,750,000
|
3,347,200
|
Kazakhstan
|
3,110,000
|
207,333
|
207,333
|
207,333
|
622,000
|
8,180,000
|
7,558,000
|
Kenya
|
1,850,000
|
91,778
|
94,933
|
98,089
|
284,800
|
2,080,000
|
1,795,200
|
Kosovo
|
470,000
|
30,889
|
30,933
|
30,978
|
92,800
|
1,200,000
|
1,107,200
|
Kyrgyzstan
|
1,460,000
|
99,111
|
98,933
|
98,756
|
296,800
|
3,230,000
|
2,933,200
|
Lebanon
|
640,000
|
44,889
|
44,667
|
44,444
|
134,000
|
1,950,000
|
1,816,000
|
Liberia
|
210,000
|
9,556
|
10,000
|
10,444
|
30,000
|
270,000
|
240,000
|
Malaysia
|
5,970,000
|
348,667
|
353,600
|
358,533
|
1,060,800
|
12,130,000
|
11,069,200
|
Mali
|
6,790,000
|
329,111
|
341,467
|
353,822
|
1,024,400
|
7,720,000
|
6,695,600
|
Morocco
|
8,940,000
|
607,556
|
606,400
|
605,244
|
1,819,200
|
22,990,000
|
21,170,800
|
Mozambique
|
1,870,000
|
88,667
|
92,267
|
95,867
|
276,800
|
2,330,000
|
2,053,200
|
Niger
|
7,480,000
|
332,889
|
349,467
|
366,044
|
1,048,400
|
7,790,000
|
6,741,600
|
Nigeria
|
37,300,000
|
1,711,111
|
1,788,667
|
1,866,222
|
5,366,000
|
39,990,000
|
34,624,000
|
Pakistan
|
59,120,000
|
3,543,556
|
3,583,333
|
3,623,111
|
10,750,000
|
108,290,000
|
97,540,000
|
Palestin. T.
|
1,670,000
|
87,778
|
90,133
|
92,489
|
270,400
|
2,260,000
|
1,989,600
|
Russia
|
2,780,000
|
226,667
|
222,533
|
218,400
|
667,600
|
11,500,000
|
10,832,400
|
Senegal
|
5,260,000
|
269,778
|
277,867
|
285,956
|
833,600
|
6,720,000
|
5,886,400
|
Tajikistan
|
2,460,000
|
148,000
|
149,600
|
151,200
|
448,800
|
4,190,000
|
3,741,200
|
Tanzania
|
6,680,000
|
350,667
|
360,133
|
369,600
|
1,080,400
|
9,100,000
|
8,019,600
|
Tunisia
|
2,450,000
|
186,889
|
184,533
|
182,178
|
553,600
|
7,970,000
|
7,416,400
|
Turkey
|
18,790,000
|
1,268,222
|
1,266,667
|
1,265,111
|
3,800,000
|
52,530,000
|
48,730,000
|
Uganda
|
1,860,000
|
90,667
|
94,000
|
97,333
|
282,000
|
1,990,000
|
1,708,000
|
Uzbekistan
|
7,830,000
|
548,222
|
545,600
|
542,978
|
1,636,800
|
18,720,000
|
17,083,200
|
Sum
|
378,300,000
|
22,871,111
|
23,106,000
|
23,340,889
|
69,318,000
|
760,670,000
|
691,352,000
|
The 39 countries above (except Iran) are from Pew’s The World’s
Muslims (2013) report. Displayed numbers are rounded.
|
|||||||
Data Source: Pew Global Religious Futures Project, 2010
Age Structure Estimates for Muslims.
|
|||||||
*Estimates for age groups 15, 16, 17, and ≥ 18 years were
made by Empethop based on Pew’s numbers.
|
Those who delve into Pew’s population estimates may notice
that there are, for 15 of the 39 countries, discrepancies of ± 10000 between
Pew’s published estimates of the total Muslim population and the totals
obtained by summing the Muslim population age groups in Pew’s age structure
estimates. (For the other 24 countries there were no discrepancies between the
totals). The discrepancies sum to -30000 across 39 countries, a number that is
too small to have a significant impact on the results reported here for overall
population-weighted percentages of response types. (Note: Pew updates their population
estimates from time to time, so the discrepancies that I report here may be
gone or may have changed by the time you read this).
The Pew opinion surveys reported above were carried
out starting in December of 2008 for the sub-Saharan African study and ending
in February of 2012 for The World’s Muslims study. I chose 2010 as the year for
the population estimates because Pew published estimates for that year, and it
is the same year as the Pew Global (2010) survey, or mostly within one year of
the start of the Sub-Saharan and the end of the World’s Muslims survey period.
In addition, doing my own separate estimates for each year in the range would
be more time-consuming and, I believe, would not gain much more accuracy. For the
36 countries included in the analyses of the three harsh punishment items, the estimated
age ≥ 18 Muslim population is 600773600. The general, all-ages Muslim
population for those 36 countries is 1,006,890,000, obtained from Pew’s
numbers. Hence, the (2010) age ≥ 18 Muslim population is about 59.67% of total
Muslim population of those 36 countries.
Pew’s estimate for the 2010 population of Muslims of all ages worldwide
is 1,599,700,000 (see here),
and 59.67% of that is roughly 954,481,000. That’s assuming that the Muslim
population age structure of those 36 countries combined can be generalized to
that of the remaining countries that were not surveyed.
Appendix B
Using PSPP to Work on the Pew Data Files
If you choose to attempt to replicate the entire set
of results reported in the analyses above, I should caution that that would
probably be a very time-consuming project for most people. I would recommend
for those who have some (but not a great deal) of experience working with data that
a more manageable project would be to focus on verifying the results for one
question that interests you most. For those who have little to no experience
working with data, I would recommend that you not attempt to replicate these
results unless you have some guidance from someone who is experienced, or until
you learn the knowledge and skills needed.
In a previous
article I gave some instructions for how to easily open up a Pew data file and
do a simple analysis of the response option percentages for particular
questions for each country. Readers who have adequate experience in using
spreadsheets and an introductory knowledge of statistics and research methods can
apply the instructions to reproduce and verify the results shown in the present
article using the freely-available statistical software PSPP. It will be
necessary to use a spreadsheet such as Excel, or the freely-available Calc, or
others, with which to work on the PSPP output. You can also verify the results
reported in this article using software other than PSPP, but obviously some of the instructional
details will differ between systems. I recommend PSPP for these simple analyses
because it is free, easy to use, and can handle the large Pew data files.
In calculating population percentages and numbers, it
is important to have original figures that are accurate to several decimal
places. These are available only from Pew’s data files. PSPP is set by default
to display results of analyses (i.e., output numbers) to two decimal places. If
you want to reproduce the results reported above, maintaining a good level of
accuracy through the intermediate calculations, I suggest that you set PSPP to
display the output percentages to at least nine (9) decimal places. The brief
syntax for this modification can be cut and pasted from the PSPP site into
a syntax file. Change the 6 in their example SET FORMAT F22.6. to a 9 when you
enter it into a PSPP syntax editor (see Figure 1 below). Save it as a PSPP
syntax file.
Figure 1
When you have the data file open, open this syntax
file, and select Run and All before doing the analysis. That means PSPP will
run the command to display output to the specified number of decimal places for
all subsequent analyses, as long as that syntax file is open and is not
modified further.
Calculating the population percentages and numbers.
Carry out a simple Crosstabs analysis, with country as
rows and the question as columns, to obtain a table of the response choice
percentages for each country (see instructions in a previous
article). Make sure the appropriate weight variable is turned on for the analysis. Once you’ve obtained the response choice percentages precise to
several decimal places, the next step is to export this PSPP output to a
spreadsheet (e.g., Excel, Calc, etc.) where the percentages can be converted to
proportions. To export the output, go to the Output window and click on File,
then click on Export. Name the file and save it in .csv format and to a folder
for your outputs for this project. You can then go to that file and open it
with your preferred spreadsheet program. [When you open it in the spreadsheet, then format the percentages as
proportions, showing, for example, numbers carried to 11 decimal places if your output percentages
were displayed to 9 decimal places. Save the numbers in the proportion format (e.g.,
to 11 decimal places) before closing the file]. Note that to reproduce the results
reported here, you will need to make several such output files. Enter the
estimated adult Muslim populations of the relevant countries (e.g., see
Appendix A). The population-weighted percentages of responses are obtained by
the following steps, for each question:
1. Multiply the proportion for each response (e.g.,
favor, oppose, don’t know, refused) for each country by the estimated adult
Muslim population for each country. These products are the estimated numbers of
Muslim adults in each country for each response.
2. For each response, sum the products in the previous
step. (E.g., if there are 36 countries, obtain the sum of the 36 products).
3. Divide each of the sums obtained in the previous
step by the sum of the adult Muslim populations of all the relevant countries.
The quotients are the proportions of adult Muslims over all the relevant
countries for each type of response.
A Note on Analyzing the Sub-Saharan African (2009)
Data
Pew’s 2012 The World’s Muslims dataset has only data for Muslims, but their (2009) sub-Saharan
African data set includes data for multiple religious groups. To select only
the data for Muslims, it is necessary to filter non-Muslim cases out of the
analysis. Respondent’s religion is recorded in the “RELIGrec” variable just
after Q31. Muslim is coded as 2 in the RELIGrec column. Use the Compute
function, located in the Transform menu, to create a filter variable, as shown
in this example where I’ve named the filter variable “Muslim” (see Figure 2,
below).
Figure 2
Then press OK. This procedure creates a binary variable
where all Muslim cases are coded as one (1) and all non-Muslim cases as zero
(0). You can then use “Select Cases” (located under the Data menu) to put on
your Muslim filter variable for the analysis. Select “Use filter variable,”
scroll down to and then click on the “Muslim” variable, then press OK to put on
that filter. If you are planning to do numerous analyses of the Muslim data,
for convenience you may wish to make a separate data file with only the Muslim
data. To do that, save a new copy of the file (e.g., name it to indicate it is only Muslim data), and in the new copy follow the above steps but, in the “Select Cases” dialog box,
choose the “Deleted” option for unselected cases, then save.
Appendix C
Margins of Error and Other Sources of Variability
The combined samples are much larger than those reported for the individual countries shown on page 150 in Pew, 2013; page 66 in Pew's 2010 sub-Saharan report; and page 21 in Pew Global, 2010. Therefore one can expect the margins of error for the combined samples to be much smaller. The details of how Pew calculated the margins of error for each individual country’s sample are not published, but they are evidently complex, taking into account factors such as their weighting and stratified random sampling schemes (e.g., see pages 147-148 in Pew, 2013). One can still get a rough idea of the size of the margins of error by using online calculators (e.g., here and here). Using these calculators that assume simple random sampling, the Pew Global (2010) 7-country combined (raw, unweighted) sample of 6688 would have a margin of error of about ± 1.2%, or roughly plus or minus one percent, assuming a response choice proportion of .5 (50%), with 95% confidence. (Response choice proportion is the proportion of respondents who chose a particular answer, e.g., the proportion who said they favored stoning of adulterers). Margin of error decreases as response choice proportion deviates from .5 toward 1 or 0. These calculators also indicate that the Pew (2013) 36-country combined (raw, unweighted) sample of 34744 examined here would have a margin of error of about ± 0.53%, or roughly plus or minus half of one percent, again assuming a response choice proportion of .5, with 95% confidence. While these simple margin of error estimations are not strictly appropriate for Pew’s data, they are based on large samples and so are probably not far off of what the appropriate estimates would be.
The statistical margins of error should also be viewed in broader perspective as one kind of variability among multiple potential sources of variability. For example, the level of support or opposition to some items may have changed over the years since the surveys were conducted (2008-2012). Slight changes in the wording of questions can sometimes produce significant changes in response choices. The overall level of support or opposition to some items could also change if Pew were to include additional countries in the survey, such as Saudi Arabia, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Yemen, Syria, and so on. (That said, given that Pew sampled numerous countries that span a wide spectrum of opinion, and the majority of the world’s Muslim adults, it is likely that the averages that I report here are not very far off of what they would be had Pew sampled from all the world’s Muslim adults).
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