Feeling of belonging to a neighbourhood

Published

This page has been archived.
It has been replaced by Community and belonging.

There is a new version of this page. View the latest version.

1. Main facts and figures

  • more than half (between 60% and 65%) of adults from the Asian, Black, Mixed, White and Other ethnic groups felt strongly that they belonged to their immediate neighbourhood
Things you need to know

The Community Life Survey (previously the Citizenship Survey) is a ‘sample survey’: it collects information from a random sample of the population to make generalisations (reach ‘findings’) about the total population.

Keep in mind when making comparisons between ethnic groups that all survey estimates are subject to a degree of uncertainty, as they are based on a sample of the population. The degree of uncertainty is greater when the number of respondents is small, so it will be highest for ethnic minority groups.

The commentary only refers to differences between groups where they are ‘statistically significant’. Findings are statistically significant when we can be confident that they can be repeated, and are reflective of the total population rather than just the survey sample.

Specifically, the statistical tests used mean we can be confident that if we carried out the same survey on different random samples of the population, 19 times out of 20 we would get similar findings.

Results by ethnic group are available in the reference tables of the latest Community Life Survey publication.

What the data measures

This data measures how strongly people feel they belong to their immediate neighbourhood, and breaks down that information by ethnicity.

As part of the Community Life Survey, adults were asked: ‘How strongly do you feel you belong to your immediate neighbourhood?’. People who answered ‘fairly strongly’ or ‘very strongly’ were categorised as feeling strongly that they belonged to their neighbourhood.

The ethnic categories used in this data

For this data, the number of people surveyed (the ‘sample size’) was too small to draw any firm conclusions about specific ethnic categories. Therefore, the data is broken down into the following 5 broad groups:

  • Asian
  • Black
  • Mixed
  • White
  • Other

2. Feeling of belonging strongly to one's neighbourhood by ethnicity

Percentage of adults who felt strongly they belong to their neighbourhood by ethnicity
Ethnicity % Respondents
All 62 10,215
Asian 64 1,109
Black 60 357
Mixed 65 462
White 61 7,996
Other 62 162

Download table data for ‘Feeling of belonging strongly to one's neighbourhood by ethnicity’ (CSV) Source data for ‘Feeling of belonging strongly to one's neighbourhood by ethnicity’ (CSV)

Summary of Feeling of belonging to a neighbourhood Feeling of belonging strongly to one's neighbourhood by ethnicity Summary

  • the percentage of adults who felt strongly that they belonged to their immediate neighbourhood was broadly similar among different ethnic groups (between 60% and 65%)

3. Methodology

The Community Life Survey is a survey of households in England. It is carried out through questionnaires that respondents complete online or on paper. The 2016/17 survey consisted of a sample size of 10,256 individuals.

The survey has deliberately surveyed more households from ethnic minority groups (excluding White ethnic minorities). This is because the smaller populations of these groups would otherwise give less reliable results.

The results for this sample have been weighted to be representative of the population of England in terms of age, gender, degree level education, housing tenure, region, household size and ethnic group. This helped to compensate for any differences between people who were more likely to respond to the survey and those less likely to. It also took account of the over-sampling of ethnic minority groups in any national estimates.

The 2016/17 survey sample is large enough for the results to be broken down by the broad ethnic groups. In previous years, sample sizes for this survey were conducted face-to-face and in more recent years they had considerably smaller sample sizes. The smaller samples sizes meant it was only possible to compare ethnic groups at a very high level, comparing White adults with adults of all Other ethnic groups.

In the most recent survey years, sample sizes were anywhere from 2,000 to 3,000 respondents, which was too small for reliable conclusions about differences between the White and Other ethnic groups.

For these reasons, results for 2016/17 are not being compared with those from previous surveys.

For earlier years, results for ‘White’ and ‘Other’ are available in the published tables in the series of releases for the Community Life Survey.

Suppression rules and disclosure control

Results are not published when based on fewer than 30 respondents. All the results presented here are based on sample sizes of more than 100 respondents.

Rounding

Estimates in the charts and tables are given to the nearest percentage but more detailed estimates to one decimal place are available in the download.

Quality and methodology information

4. Data sources

Source

Type of data

Survey data

Type of statistic

Official statistics

Publisher

Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport

Publication frequency

Yearly

Purpose of data source

The Community Life Survey tracks developments in areas that are important to encouraging social action and empowering communities.

These include:

  • volunteering and charitable giving
  • neighbourhood (views about the local area, community cohesion and belonging)
  • civic engagement and social action
  • well-being

5. Download the data

Feeling of belonging to one's neighbourhood - Spreadsheet (csv) 781 bytes

This file contains the following: ethnicity, time, value, sample size