American National Election Study, 1988: Introduction and codebook


Book Description

Data collection derived from a national survey of the attitudes and behavior of the American electorate. Respondents were asked about their involvement and interest in the 1988 campaigns; whether and how they voted; and about their knowledge of issue positions held by the president and candidates. Evaluations of President Reagan's performance as well as demographic characteristics were also ascertained. New items in the series include questions on values and attitudes on racial issues.




American National Election Study, 1988: Appendix


Book Description

Data collection derived from a national survey of the attitudes and behavior of the American electorate. Respondents were asked about their involvement and interest in the 1988 campaigns; whether and how they voted; and about their knowledge of issue positions held by the president and candidates. Evaluations of President Reagan's performance as well as demographic characteristics were also ascertained. New items in the series include questions on values and attitudes on racial issues.




Guide to Resources and Services


Book Description

Describes serial data and reference collections in machine- readable form in the ICPSR repository, including survey title, date, summary, universe, sampling and data format.










Books in Print


Book Description




American National Election Study, 1992


Book Description

The 1992 National Election Study entailed both a pre-election interview and a post-election re-interview. Aprroximately half of the 1992 cases are comprised of empaneled respondents who were first interviewed in the 1990 National Election Study and later in the 1991 Political Consequences of War Study. The other half of the cases are a freshly drawn cross-section sample.




Racial Attitudes in the 1990s


Book Description

More than half a century has passed since the publication of An American Dilemma: The Negro Problem and Modern Democracy, Gunnar Myrdal's agonizing portrait of the pervasiveness of racially prejudiced attitudes and discriminatory practices in American life. Central to Myrdal's work was the paradox posed by the coexistence of race-based social, economic, and political inequality on the one hand, and the cherished American cultural values of freedom and equality on the other. In the five decades since the publication of this work, there has been a dramatic decline in white Americans' overt expressions of anti-black and anti-integrationist sentiments and in many of the inequalities Myrdal highlighted in his monumental work. Yet the persistence of racial antipathy is evidence of the continuing dilemma of race in American society. This collection of original essays by leading race relations experts focuses on the recent history and current state of racial attitudes in the United States. It addresses key issues and debates in the literature, and it includes chapters on the racial attitudes of African-Americans as well as whites. The volume will be of great importance to students and scholars concerned with the sociology and politics of contemporary American race relations.