Study title
Slovene Public Opinion Survey 1991/1
Creator
Toš, Niko (University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Sociology, Political Science and Journalism)
Simon, János (Institute of Political Science, Budapest)
Bruszt, László (Institute of Sociology, Budapest)
Barnes, Samuel (Center for German and European Studies, Georgetown University)
Study number / PID
URN:SI:UNI-LJ-FDV:ADPSJM911 (NUK)
https://doi.org/10.17898/ADP_SJM911_V1 (doi)
Data access
Information not available
Series
Slovene Public Opinion Survey
This study is part of the 1990-92 survey coordinated by the Institute of Sociology, Budapest, Institute of Political Science, Budapest (János Simon), Wissenschaftszentrum, Berlin (H. D. Klingemann) and Center for German and European Studies, Georgetown (Samuel Barnes). The data for other countries will be available soon as an outcome of the joint effort with the German data archive ZA. The survey was again replicated in 1999 (ADP IDNo. SJM991).
Consolidation of Democracy in Central and Eastern Europe
Abstract
The topics covered included the evaluation of the socio-economic and political situation; trust in institutions; satisfaction with the state of democracy; evaluations and meaning of democracy; attributes of capitalism and democracy; party preference; which social groups gained most since last elections; the salience of various social conflicts (class, religious, ethnic, generational, ideological); protest potential; attitudes towards politics and the market economy; support for basic institutions of democracy; ISSP Role of Government battery about what socio-economic tasks the government should be responsible for; left-right self-placement; political participation (discussion, campaign, rallies, etc); media exposure; political efficacy (both internal and external, many items); evaluation of the prospects of democracy in own country; understanding of left and right in politics; membership in political and other organisations; how much influence the respondent has on decisons at workplace and in the family; attitudes towards multiparty system and privatisation; rating of various countries according to living standards, equality in front of law, and political influence of ordinary people.