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British Election Study October 1974, Cross-Section

Title
British Election Study [electronic resource] October 1974, Cross-Section Ivor Crewe, Bo Saerlvik, James Alt
Edition
2006-01-31
Published
Ann Arbor, Mich. Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor] 1984
Physical Description
1 online resource
Local Notes
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Notes
Title from ICPSR DDI metadata of 2019-06-13.
Great Britain
United Kingdom
Global
The eligible British electorate living south of the Caledonian Canal and excluding Northern Ireland.
Type of File
Numeric
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
AVAILABLE. This study is freely available to ICPSR member institutions.
Summary
The October 1974 cross-section is part of a continuing series of surveys of the British electorate, begun by David Butler and Donald Stokes at Nuffield College, Oxford, in 1963, and continued at the University of Essex. For the October 1974 Cross-Section survey, 2,365 British electors were interviewed, of which 1,674 had also been interviewed in the February 1974 cross-section, although this is NOT a panel file. As with other surveys in the series, electors in Northern Ireland and the Scottish Highlands and Islands were excluded from the sampling frame. Interviewed in October 1974 (and stretching to January 1975 in order to boost the response rate), respondents answered questions relating to the mass media (e.g., attention to newspapers and television and perceived bias in newspapers), their first and second choices in the October 1974 general election, and their opinions of the Conservative, Labour, Liberal, Scottish Nationalist, and Plaid Cymru political parties (e.g., perceived difference among parties, knowledge of party position/record, party identification, and the strength of party preference). Respondents also were asked for their views on a range of social issues relating to domestic and foreign affairs, with emphasis on the economy and the Common Market. Respondents were then asked how the parties stood on each issue, and how much that influenced the respondent's vote. Some of the issues include rising prices, strikes, unemployment, pensions, housing, North Sea oil, taxation, the Common Market, social services, nationalization, wage controls, and the amount of power held by unions and by big business. Respondents were also asked for their attitudes about their personal financial status, change/getting ahead, life in general, today's standards, local government, their own occupation, and the government's achievements. They also gave their predictions for Britain's future economy and of the outcome of the October election, and compared Britain's government and industry with those of Europe. Respondents were asked if they felt the following had gone too far: sex and race equality, police handling of demonstrations, law breakers, pornography, modern teaching methods, abortion, welfare benefits, and military cuts. Respondents were then asked to agree or disagree with the suggestions that government should: establish comprehensives, increase cash to health service, repatriate immigrants, control land, increase foreign aid, toughen on crime, control pollution, give workers more say, curb Communists, spend on poverty, redistribute wealth, decentralize power, and preserve the countryside. Background information includes age, sex, marital status, place of residence during childhood, subjective class, forced subjective class, family class, tenure, type and length of residence, employment status, degree of responsibility in and training for job (respondent and spouse), experience of unemployment in household, income, trade union membership (respondent and spouse), and socioeconomic group.Cf: http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR07870.v1
Other formats
Also available as downloadable files.
Format
Data Sets / Online
Language
English
Added to Catalog
June 14, 2019
Contents
Dataset
Genre/Form
Data sets.
Also listed under
Crewe, Ivor University of Essex
Saerlvik, Bo University of Essex
Alt, James University of Essex
Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research.
Citation

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