For those interested in such things, here https://github.com/anisotropi4/nuthatch is a project to download and project GB 2021 census data onto a scaled set of layered hexagons
#UKCensus #Census2021 #population #hexagon #DataVisualisation
For those interested in such things, here https://github.com/anisotropi4/nuthatch is a project to download and project GB 2021 census data onto a scaled set of layered hexagons
#UKCensus #Census2021 #population #hexagon #DataVisualisation
For those interested in such things, here https://github.com/anisotropi4/nuthatch is a project to download and project GB 2021 census data onto a scaled set of layered hexagons
#UKCensus #Census2021 #population #hexagon #DataVisualisation
The code to create projected 2021 Census data onto a set of layered hexagon is here
https://github.com/anisotropi4/nuthatch
Mea culpa as I had forgotten to push it to github
#UKCensus #Census2021 #population #hexagon #DataVisualisation
These maps are things of beauty!
#UkCensus #Census2021
https://www.ons.gov.uk/census/maps?oa=E00013790
The headline on this piece is potentially misleading, because it implies Christianity is a 'minority' religion.
Christianity is by far the largest UK religious group at 46.2% of the population (a stat bizarrely not mentioned in the article).
The 'minority' issue stems from rising numbers identifying as "no religion", 37.2%.
The 2nd biggest 'religion' is Islam at 6.5%.
Headline writers need to be much more sensitive when framing stories like this.
"People who said they had no religion increased by 12 percentage points, while the number of people identifying as Muslim increased by 1.2 million."
That '12 percentage points' equates to 6 million people, but which sounds like more?
How hard would it be to let readers easily compare like with like?