Librarian View

LEADER 07301cmm a22008655u 4500
001 14428165
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006 m f a u
007 cr mn mmmmuuuu
008 190613s2005 miu fo a eng d
035
  
  
|a (MiAaI)ICPSR04137
040
  
  
|a MiAaI |c MiAaI
245
0
0
|a Global Views 2004 |h [electronic resource] |b American Public Opinion and Foreign Policy |c Chicago Council on Foreign Relations
250
  
  
|a 2006-03-30
260
  
  
|a Ann Arbor, Mich. |b Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor] |c 2005
490
1
  
|a ICPSR |v 4137
440
  
0
|a American Public Opinion and United States Foreign Policy Series
506
  
  
|a Access restricted by licensing agreement.
516
  
  
|a Numeric
500
  
  
|a Title from ICPSR DDI metadata of 2019-06-13.
506
  
  
|a AVAILABLE. This study is freely available to ICPSR member institutions.
530
  
  
|a Also available as downloadable files.
522
  
  
|a United States
520
3
  
|a This study is part of a quadrennial series designed to investigate the opinions and attitudes of the general public and a select group of opinion leaders on matters related to foreign policy, and to define the parameters of public opinion within which decision-makers must operate. Part 1 consists of data acquired from interviews of leaders with foreign policy power, specialization, and expertise. These include Congressional members or their senior staff, university administrators and academics who teach in the area of international relations, journalists and editorial staff who handle international news, administration officials and other senior staff in various agencies and offices dealing with foreign policy, religious leaders, senior business executives from FORTUNE 1,000 corporations, labor presidents of the largest labor unions, presidents of major private foreign policy organizations, and presidents of major special interest groups relevant to foreign policy. For Part 2, the Chicago Council on Foreign Relations (CCFR) conducted its opinion survey of the American general public through the Internet. In particular, this study covers the global United States position, international norms and the use of force, multilateralism and international institutions, international norms and economic relations, and policy attitudes and perceptions of United States leaders and the public. Regarding the global United States position, respondents were asked to give their opinions on threats to the vital interests that most Americans consider critical, the fundamental foreign policy goals that they want to pursue, how much they are willing to spend on foreign policy-related items, whether they favor the United States having military bases overseas in general and their support for stationing troops in various specified countries, their views on the Middle East, how active the United States should be in world affairs, their willingness to take action against terrorism, and their support for diplomatic and other nonmilitary actions to solve conflicts. On the topic of international norms and the use of force, respondents gave their opinions on adhering to traditional norms and empowering the United Nations, preventive action against a state seeking weapons of mass destruction, using force against a state supporting terrorists, the use of nuclear weapons, the use of torture, using force against a state conduction genocide, using force to restore a democratic government, and defending a country that has been attacked. Concerning multilateralism and international institutions, respondents were asked their level of support for collective decision-making through international institutions and for empowering the United Nations, their attitudes toward other major international organizations, their support for international agreements, their desire to seek consensus among nations, and their opinions on the idea of spreading democracy. On the subject of international norms and economic relations, respondents were asked about pursuing free trade with certain conditions, globalization and trade in principle, their support for the trading system and institutions, their concerns about inequities, and their opinions on mitigating the effects of trade, achieving equity in trade, trade as a strategic tool, responsibility for development aid, regional trade agreements, and migration. For the sake of comparison, Parts 1 and 2 include many of the same questions asked of both groups. Background information on respondents includes religion, age, income, education, gender, marital status, and employment status. Part 3 is a special telephone survey of the general public designed to be directly comparable to the telephone survey of 2002.Cf: http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR04137.v1
505
0
  
|t Leaders Data
505
0
  
|t General Public Data
505
0
  
|t Small Telephone Survey of General Public
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|a Part 1: Leaders in the United States, including members of Congress, business leaders, journalists, labor leaders, academic leaders, religious leaders, and leaders of major private foreign policy organizations. Parts 2, 3: Adult population of the United States.
590
  
  
|a Individual login required to download datasets.
590
  
  
|a Access is available to the Yale community.
650
  
7
|a Arab Israeli conflict |2 icpsr
650
  
7
|a defense spending |2 icpsr
650
  
7
|a economic aid |2 icpsr
650
  
7
|a European Union |2 icpsr
650
  
7
|a foreign aid |2 icpsr
650
  
7
|a foreign policy |2 icpsr
650
  
7
|a global warming |2 icpsr
650
  
7
|a government subsidies |2 icpsr
650
  
7
|a immigration policy |2 icpsr
650
  
7
|a International Monetary Fund |2 icpsr
650
  
7
|a international relations |2 icpsr
650
  
7
|a Iraq War |2 icpsr
650
  
7
|a military bases |2 icpsr
650
  
7
|a military intervention |2 icpsr
650
  
7
|a NAFTA |2 icpsr
650
  
7
|a national security |2 icpsr
650
  
7
|a NATO |2 icpsr
650
  
7
|a nuclear weapons |2 icpsr
650
  
7
|a terrorism |2 icpsr
650
  
7
|a trade policy |2 icpsr
650
  
7
|a United Nations |2 icpsr
650
  
7
|a World Bank |2 icpsr
650
  
7
|a World Court |2 icpsr
650
  
7
|a World Health Organization |2 icpsr
650
  
7
|a World Trade Organization |2 icpsr
653
0
  
|a ICPSR XIV.C.1. Mass Political Behavior and Attitudes, Public Opinion on Political Matters, United States
653
0
  
|a TPDRC I. Terrorism
710
2
  
|a Chicago Council on Foreign Relations
710
2
  
|a Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research.
830
  
0
|a ICPSR (Series) |v 4137
852
8
0
|b yulint |h None |z Online resource
852
8
0
|z Online resource
856
4
0
|y Online dataset |u https://yale.idm.oclc.org/login?URL=http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR04137.v1
902
  
  
|a Yale Internet Resource |b Yale Internet Resource >> None|DELIM|14432166
905
  
  
|a online resource
907
  
  
|a 2019-06-14T14:09:38.000Z
946
  
  
|a DO NOT EDIT. DO NOT EXPORT.
090
  
  
|a yuldset
090
  
  
|a yuldsetnum
300
  
  
|a 1 online resource
336
  
  
|a computer dataset |b cod |2 rdacontent
337
  
  
|a computer |b c |2 rdamedia
338
  
  
|a online resource |b cr |2 rdacarrier
655
  
7
|a Data sets. |2 lcgft
953
4
0
|a http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR04137.v1