Summary information

Study title

Slovenian Public Opinion 2016/1

Creator

Kurdija, Slavko (University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Social Sciences, Public Opinion and Mass Communication Research Centre)
Hafner-Fink, Mitja (University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Social Sciences, Public Opinion and Mass Communication Research Centre)
Malnar, Brina (University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Social Sciences, Public Opinion and Mass Communication Research Centre)
Podnar, Klement (Centre for Marketing and Public Relations)

Study number / PID

SJM161 (ADP)

URN:SI:UNI-LJ-FDV:ADPSJM161 (NUK)

https://doi.org/10.17898/ADP_SJM161_V1 (doi)

Data access

Information not available

Series

Slovene Public Opinion Survey

Slovenian Public Opinion (SJM) survey series closely resembles the type of General Social Surveys, well known in other countries. The aim is to provide the scientific community with relevant data about changes in subjective perceptions and attitudes of general population. The topics, which are repeated each year, beginning with 1968, are evaluations of general and economic situation in society, interethnic relations in Slovenia and Yugoslavia, politics, ecology and religion. Since 1989, SJM surveys have been involved in cross-national comparative perspectives by adopting and replicating...

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Abstract

Slovenian Public Opinion 2016/1 is a package of surveys, which belongs to the Slovenian Public Opinion survey series. The questionnaire includes 4 topical sections which cover the following national surveys: Relation between Work and Family, Attitudes on family issues and needs of families, Attitudes on selected aspects of health and health care, Mirror of public opinion 2016 The survey was performed on a representative sample (N=1950; realized sample N=1070) of inhabitants of the Republic of Slovenia, 18 years of age or older. It was conducted between April and June 2016. During that time 38 interviewers collected data in 150 selected local environments in Slovenia.Slovenian Public Opinion 2016/1 is a package of surveys, which belongs to the Slovenian Public Opinion survey series. The questionnaire includes 4 topical sections which cover the following national surveys: Relation between Work and Family, Attitudes on family issues and needs of families, Attitudes on selected aspects of health and health care, Mirror of public opinion 2016 The survey was performed on a representative sample (N=1950; realized sample N=1070) of inhabitants of the Republic of Slovenia, 18 years of age or older. It was conducted between April and June 2016. During that time 38 interviewers collected data in 150 selected local environments in Slovenia.Slovenian Public Opinion 2016/1 is a package of surveys, which belongs to the Slovenian Public Opinion survey series. The questionnaire includes 4 topical sections which cover the following national surveys: Relation between Work and Family, Attitudes on family issues and needs of families, Attitudes on selected aspects of health and health care, Mirror of public opinion 2016 The survey was performed on a representative sample (N=1950; realized sample N=1070) of inhabitants of the Republic of Slovenia, 18 years of age or older. It was conducted between April and June 2016. During that time 38 interviewers collected data in 150 selected...
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Methodology

Data collection period

01/04/2016 - 13/06/2016

Country

Slovenia

Time dimension

Cross-section

Analysis unit

Individual

Universe

Institutionalised inhabitants such as high-schoolers and students, living at dorms, persons serving in the army, persons being treated in hospitals and others who are not living at their registered addresses.

Sampling procedure

Probability: Cluster: Stratified random

Kind of data

NumericNumeric

Data collection mode

Face-to-face interview: Computer-assisted (CAPI/CAMI)

Funding information

Funder

ARRS

Grant number

P5-0151; J5-5539; N2711-16-0108; N2611-16-0030

Access

Publisher

Arhiv družboslovnih podatkov = Social Science Data Archives

Publication year

2024

Terms of data access

The data and materials are licenced under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence. Users may use the data only for the purposes stated in the registration form and in accordance with professional codes of ethics. Users expressly agree to maintain the confidentiality of the data and to conduct analyses without attempting to identify the individuals and institutions covered by the materials.

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