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Prevalence
Michael D. Langone, Ph.D.
In 1984
the Cult Awareness Network
compiled a list of more than
2,000 groups about which
they had received inquiries
(Hulet, 1984). Currently
ICSA has more than 4,000
groups listed in its
electronic files, which are
populated mainly as a result
of inquiries or news
reports. I would not hazard
an estimate of what
percentage of these groups
would be at risk of harming
members. The quality and
quantity of data on
individual groups is simply
too low to justify
generalizations.
Most
cultic groups appear to be
small, having no more than a
few hundred members. Some,
however, have tens of
thousands of members and
formidable financial power.
Several
surveys shed some light on
the number of people who may
have been involved in what
they perceived to be cultic
groups.
Zimbardo
and Hartley (1985), who
surveyed a random sample of
1,000 San Francisco Bay area
high school students, found
that 3% reported being
members of cultic groups and
that 54% had had at least
one contact with a cult
recruiter.
Bloomgarden and Langone
(1984) reported that 3% and
1.5% of high school students
in two suburbs of Boston
said they were cult members.
Sociologists Bird and Reimer
(1982), in surveys of the
adult populations of San
Francisco and Montreal,
found that approximately 20%
of adults had participated
in new religious or para-religious
movements (including groups
such as Kung Fu), although
more than 70% of the
involvements were transient.
Other data in this study
suggest that approximately
two to five percent of the
subjects had participated in
groups that are frequently
thought to be cultic.
A weekly
omnibus survey conducted by
ICR Survey Research Group
for ICSA/AFF in 1993 found
that about 1% of respondents
said that they had been
involved in a cult or what
others might consider a
cult.
Lottick’s
(1993) survey of more than
1000 physicians (who are
accustomed to making
differential diagnoses)
found that 2.2% reported
that they or a family member
had been involved in a
cultic group, with "cult”
clearly defined as a noxious
group. It seems reasonable,
therefore, to estimate that
at least two million
Americans have been involved
with cultic groups.
Lottick's
(2008) survey of 695
psychologists found that
13.1% reported personal
experience - either their
own or a family member -
with cults. Thirty-three
percent of the respondents
reported that they had
treated people who were or
had been members of cultic
groups.
One study
in Spain found that among
1,517 Spanish participants
aged 14 to 29, 25.9%
expressed approval of cults,
while 0.5% reported being
cult members (Canteras,
Rodriguez, & Rodriguez-Carballeira,
1992).
In the
research study that led to
the development of the Group
Psychological Abuse Scale
(Chambers, Langone, Dole, &
Grice, 1994) subjects'
average age of joining was
24.8 and their average time
in their groups was 6.70
years (308 subjects from 101
groups; 60% left on their
own without outside, formal
assistance; 13% had been
deprogrammed; 17% exit
counseled; 9% ejected by
their groups). Assuming a
lifetime incidence of
2,500,000 people having
belonged to cultic groups, a
"lifetime" period of 30
years, and an average length
of stay of six years, I
roughly estimate that
approximately 500,000 people
belong to cultic groups at
any one time and
approximately 85,000 go in
and out of cultic groups
each year.
However,
as West (1990, p. 137) says,
"cults are able to operate
successfully because at any
given time most of their
members are either not yet
aware that they are being
exploited, or cannot express
such an awareness because of
uncertainty, shame, or
fear." Therefore, in any
survey, however random, the
actual number of cultists is
likely to be much greater
than the number of persons
who identify themselves as
members of cultic groups or
even of groups that other
people might deem cultic.
Because the group members do
not identify themselves as
such, they are not likely to
be identified as
cult-affected by
psychotherapists or other
helpers unless the helpers
inquire into the possibility
that there might be a cult
involvement.
References
Bird, F.,
& Reimer, B. (1982).
Participation rates in new
religions and para-religious
movements. Journal for
the Scientific Study of
Religion, 21,1-14.
Bloomgarden, A., & Langone,
M. D. (1984). Preventive
education on cultism for
high school students: A
comparison of different
programs' effects on
potential vulnerability to
cults. Cultic
Studies Journal, 1,
167-177.
Canteras,
A., Rodríguez, P., &
Rodríguez-Carballeira, A.
(1992). Jóvenes y sectas:
Un análisis del fenómeno
religioso-sectario en
España. Madrid: Centro de
Publicaciones. Ministerio
de Asuntos Sociales.
Chambers,
W. V., Langone, M. D., Dole,
A. A., & Grice, J. W.
(1994). The Group
Psychological Abuse Scale: A
measure of the varieties of
cultic abuse. Cultic Studies
Journal, 11(1), 88-117.
Hulet,
V. (1984).
Organizations in our Society.
Hutchinson, KS: Virginia
Hulet.
ICR
Survey Research Group.
(1993, Aug. 4-8). Cult
screening test. Media, PA:
AUS Consultants.
Lottick,
E. (Feb. 1993). Survey
reveals physicians’
experiences with cults.
Pennsylvania Medicine, 96,
26-28.
West, L.
J. (1990). Persuasive
techniques in contemporary
cults: A public health
approach. Cultic Studies
Journal, 7, 126-149.
(Reprinted from, Galanter,
M., Ed., Cults and new
religious movements.
Washington, D.C.: American
Psychiatric Association, pp.
165-192.)
Zimbardo,
P. G., & Hartley, C. F.
(1985). Cults go to high
school: A theoretical and
empirical analysis of the
initial stage in the
recruitment process.
Cultic Studies Journal, 2,
91-148. |