Summary information

Study title

British Election Study, May 1979; Cross-Section Survey

Creator

Sarlvik, B., British Election Study
Crewe, I. M., University of Essex, Department of Government
Robertson, D. R., British Election Study

Study number / PID

1533 (UKDA)

10.5255/UKDA-SN-1533-1 (DOI)

Data access

Restricted

Series

Not available

Abstract

Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner. Main Topics:Attitudinal/Behavioural Questions Vote in general election, other party thought of, vote in local elections, vote in October 1974, February 1974, and 1970. Direction and strength of party identification, level of negative identification. Marks out of ten for parties and leading politicians, open-ended likes and dislikes for Conservative, Labour and Liberal parties. Attention to media during the campaign, participation in the campaign, difference between political parties. Political knowledge measured through photography identification. Knowledge, perception of position/record on, and own opinion on: rising prices, strikes, unemployment, law and order, social services and benefits, level of taxation and government services, degree of nationalisation, best way of creating jobs, EEC economic policy, race relations and immigration, how wage levels should be established and laws to regulate activities of trade unions. Whether respondents thought the following had gone <i>too far</i>: welfare benefits, sex and race equality, pornography, teaching methods, abortion, military cuts, challenging authority. Whether respondents agree/disagree with suggestion that government should: put more cash in health service, establish comprehensives, repatriate immigrants, control land for building, give more foreign aid, bring back the death penalty, give workers more say, curb communists, get rid of poverty, redistribute wealth, preserve the countryside, give stiffer sentences to offenders, allow tenants to buy their council houses, expand the nuclear power industry, withdraw troops from Northern Ireland, reduce the power of the House of Lords. Two series of questions examine the extent of willingness to engage in various forms of political protest and forecasts about Britain's future. Amongst other issues measured were opinions on: devolution, the sex of political candidates,...
Read more

Topics

Not available

Methodology

Data collection period

01/05/1979 - 01/07/1979

Country

Great Britain

Time dimension

Cross-sectional (one-time) study

Analysis unit

National

Universe

Electors in Great Britain (south of the Caledonian Canal and excluding Northern Ireland)

Sampling procedure

Multi-stage stratified random sample
multi-stage, self-weighting, stratified, probability sample designed to represent the eligible British electorate on May 3rd 1979

Kind of data

Not available

Data collection mode

Face-to-face interview

Access

Publisher

UK Data Service

Publication year

1981

Terms of data access

The Data Collection is available to UK Data Service registered users subject to the End User Licence Agreement.

Commercial use of the data requires approval from the data owner or their nominee. The UK Data Service will contact you.

Related publications

Not available