
This study is part of a time-series collection of national surveys fielded continuously since 1952. The election studies are designed to present data on Americans' social backgrounds, enduring political predispositions, social and political values, perceptions and evaluations of groups and candidates, opinions on questions of public policy, and participation in political life. A Black supplement of 263 respondents, who were asked the same questions that were administered to the national cross-section sample, is included with the national cross-section of 1,571 respondents. In addition to the usual content, the study contains data on opinions about the Supreme Court, political knowledge, and further information concerning racial issues. Voter validation data have been included as an integral part of the election study, providing objective information from registration and voting records or from respondents' past voting behavior.
ICPSR data undergo a confidentiality review and are altered when necessary to limit the risk of disclosure. ICPSR also routinely creates ready-to-go data files along with setups in the major statistical software formats as well as standard codebooks to accompany the data. In addition to these procedures, ICPSR performed the following processing steps for this data collection: Performed consistency checks.; Standardized missing values.; Performed recodes and/or calculated derived variables.; Checked for undocumented or out-of-range codes..
A representative cross-section sample, consisting of 1,571 respondents, plus a Black supplement sample of 263 respondents.
face-to-face interview, telephone interview The SAS transport file was created using the SAS CPORT procedure.
United States citizens of voting age living in private households in the continental United States.
American National Election Study (ANES) Series
Datasets: DS1: Dataset
government performance, voter expectations, candidates, domestic policy, racial attitudes, information sources, United States Supreme Court, congressional elections, presidential elections, Civil Rights Act (1964-USA), African Americans, political affiliation, voting behavior, economic conditions, Johnson Administration (1963-1969), voter history, political efficacy, political issues, special interest groups, foreign policy, national elections, public opinion, political attitudes, public approval, political participation, political campaigns, trust in government
government performance, voter expectations, candidates, domestic policy, racial attitudes, information sources, United States Supreme Court, congressional elections, presidential elections, Civil Rights Act (1964-USA), African Americans, political affiliation, voting behavior, economic conditions, Johnson Administration (1963-1969), voter history, political efficacy, political issues, special interest groups, foreign policy, national elections, public opinion, political attitudes, public approval, political participation, political campaigns, trust in government
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