Feeling of belonging to a neighbourhood

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1. Main facts and figures

  • in 2018/19, 62% of people aged 16 and over in England said they felt strongly that they belonged to their immediate neighbourhood
  • less than half of people from Other ethnic groups (47%) felt strongly that they belonged to their immediate neighbourhood
  • this compares with higher figures in the White (62%), Black (62%), Mixed (61%) and Asian (59%) ethnic groups
Things you need to know

The data comes from The Community Life Survey (previously the Citizenship Survey). It surveys a random sample of the population to make generalisations about the whole population.

The commentary for this data only includes reliable findings. Findings are reliable ('statistically significant’) when we can be confident they reflect the whole population. This means we would get similar findings 19 times out of 20 if we carried out the same survey on different random samples of the population.

As with all surveys, the estimates are subject to a degree of uncertainty as they are based on a sample of the population. Ethnic minority groups tend to have a smaller number of survey respondents. As a result, their estimates are less reliable than those for White people.

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. The information is broken down by ethnicity.

Respondents to the Community Life Survey aged 16 and over were asked: ‘How strongly do you feel you belong to your immediate neighbourhood?’ Respondents could answer ‘very strongly’, ‘fairly strongly’, ‘not very strongly’ or ‘not at all strongly’.

Those 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

Respondents were asked to select their ethnic group from a choice of 18 categories.

However, the number of people surveyed was too small to draw any firm conclusions based on the 18 groups.

Therefore, data is shown for these 5 broad groups:

  • Asian
  • Black
  • Mixed
  • White
  • Other

2. By ethnicity

Percentage and number of respondents who feel fairly or very strongly that they belong to their neighbourhood, by ethnicity
2016-17 2017-18 2018-19
Ethnicity 2016-17 Value 2016-17 Number of respondents 2017-18 Value 2017-18 Number of respondents 2018-19 Value 2018-19 Number of respondents
All 62 10,215 62 10,173 62 10,599
Asian 64 1,109 65 925 59 907
Black 60 357 56 353 62 348
Mixed 65 462 56 508 61 497
White 61 7,996 63 8,067 62 8,541
Other 62 162 44 124 47 125

Download table data for ‘By ethnicity’ (CSV) Source data for ‘By ethnicity’ (CSV)

Summary of Feeling of belonging to a neighbourhood By ethnicity Summary

This data shows that:

  • in 2018/19, 62% of people aged 16 and over in England said they felt strongly that they belonged to their immediate neighbourhood
  • less than half of people from Other ethnic groups (47%) felt strongly that they belonged to their immediate neighbourhood
  • this compares with higher figures in the White (62%), Black (62%), Mixed (61%) and Asian (59%) ethnic groups
  • between 2017/18 and 2018/19, there was a fall in the number of Asian people feeling they belonged to their neighbourhood, from 65% to 59%
  • figures for most other ethnic groups were similar to last year, however small sample sizes mean harder to detect differences over time for the black ethnic group

3. Methodology

The Community Life Survey consists of an online or paper questionnaire. In 2018/19, it was completed by 10,627 individuals.

It 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 2016/17 to 2018/19 survey samples are large enough for the results to be broken down by 5 broad ethnic groups.

In 2014/15 and 2015/16, sample sizes ranged from around 2,000 to 3,000 respondents. This was too small to draw reliable conclusions about differences between the White and Other ethnic groups. For these reasons, results for 2016/17 onwards are not compared with those from 2014/15 to 2015/16.

For earlier years, results are available for reference purposes from the Community Life Survey.

Weighting:

Weighting is used to adjust the results of a survey to make them representative of the population and improve their accuracy.

For example, a survey which contains 25% females and 75% males will not accurately reflect the views of the general population, which we know is around 50% male and 50% female.

Statisticians rebalance or ‘weight’ the survey results to more accurately represent the general population. This helps to make them more reliable.

Survey weights are usually applied to make sure the survey sample has broadly the same gender, age, ethnic and geographic make up as the general population. In this case they also took account of the over-sampling in any national estimates.

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.

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