Summary information

Study title

Swedish election study 1968

Creator

Särlvik, Bo (Department of Political Science, University of Gothenburg)
Statistics Sweden

Study number / PID

snd0039-1-1.0 (SND)

https://doi.org/10.5878/002502 (DOI)

Data access

Restricted

Series

Not available

Abstract

The 1968 election study is almost twice as big as the earlier election studies, largely because of the goal of the survey, which was to cover the system of representation. A separate study, addressed to the Members of Parliament, included similar questions put in this study of the electorate. In this way a comparison of the opinions of the electorate and the opinions of the MP´s is possible. Except the questions repeated in all election studies, this study includes questions on employment, public representation on bank boards, agricultural policy, income tax, privately-owned TV-companies, religion, aid to developing countries, defence expenditures, and the Common Market. There are also a number of questions about how different groups are treated by the authorities. It also includes questions about the respondent´s sympathies for different groups in society. This study also introduces the left-right scale, a ten degree scale on which the respondent positions the political parties according to the respondent´s opinion of the party as a left-wing, centre or right-wing party. The 1968 study is the second stage in the 1964-1968-1970 panel study. Purpose: Explain why people vote as they do and why an election ends in a particular way. Track and follow trends in the Swedish electoral democracy and make comparisons with other countries.

Methodology

Data collection period

01/08/1968 - 31/10/1968

Country

Sweden

Time dimension

Longitudinal: Panel

Analysis unit

Individual

Universe

Individuals born 1884-1947, residing in Sweden and eligible to vote in the parliamentary election 1968

Sampling procedure

The sample was drawn from Statistics Sweden Survey Research Centre's sampling framework. The framework consisted of a nation-wide set of primary sampling units which provide the framework for a 'general purpose' two- stage population sample.

Kind of data

Not available

Data collection mode

Face-to-face interview

Access

Publisher

Swedish National Data Service

Publication year

1982

Terms of data access

Access to data through SND. Access to data is restricted.

Related publications

Not available