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Gideon Falter

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Gideon Falter,

Gideon Falter

Opinion

Our dedication to ensuring CAA hate stats add up

In public, 39 per cent of us are concealing our religion, while 64 per cent of us think the authorities do too little to punish antisemitism, and 52 per cent think the Crown Prosecution Service does too little

September 1, 2017 15:21
Gideon Falter, Campaign Against Antisemitism chairman
2 min read

In last week’s JC, sociology researcher Keith Kahn-Harris welcomed the Campaign Against Antisemitism’s latest research into antisemitism in the UK, and British Jews’ responses to it, but he raised questions about our charity’s approach to the answers. I am happy to answer them.

Our Antisemitism Barometer research is the product of three years’ work. We undertook five polls and analysed 10,567 responses. We commissioned YouGov to survey attitudes towards Jews amongst British people in 2015, 2016 and 2017.

Separately, we worked with partners in the community to poll British Jews’ responses to antisemitism in 2016 and 2017, hiring a former associate director at YouGov to ensure our results accurately represented the national Jewish community. As Dr Kahn-Harris recognised, “the report’s findings need to be considered seriously”.

Our charity seeks to educate against antisemitism whilst simultaneously working to inflict criminal, professional and reputational sanctions upon antisemites. To succeed, we must pinpoint the problem, and that is why the accuracy of our research is crucial: if it contains mistakes, we could find ourselves fighting the wrong battles.