Summary information

Study title

Finnish Expatriates' National Identity and Political Participation 2014

Creator

Peltoniemi, Johanna (Tampere University)
Ruostetsaari, Ilkka (Tampere University)

Study number / PID

FSD3463 (FSD)

urn:nbn:fi:fsd:T-FSD3463 (URN)

10.60686/t-fsd3463 (DOI)

Data access

Restricted

Series

Individual datasets

Individual datasets that do not belong to any series.

Abstract

The study examined the national identity and political participation of Finns living abroad. The study received funding from the Unit for Democracy, Language Affairs and Fundamental Rights at the Ministry of Justice, the Migration Institute of Finland and the Finnish Club of Tampere. Questions surveying national identity examined, among others, how long the respondents had lived abroad, their reasons for moving abroad, languages spoken with different people, contacts and visits to Finland, importance of different places (e.g. place of birth, Finland, country of residence, Europe) and the most important characteristics in terms of their identity (e.g. occupation, citizenship, gender, religion, country of residence). Further questions charted the importance of various things when considering who is a Finn (e.g. being a citizen of Finland, having lived in Finland most of one's life, having Finnish heritage), feeling of Finnishness, feelings of national pride in different things (e.g. international political influence, achievements in sports), and things the respondents felt they had had to change or give up when moving abroad (language, cultural traditions, opinions or habits). Political participation was surveyed with questions about interest in politics, following politics in the media, forms of political participation engaged in (e.g. signing a petition, participating in a demonstration), participation in citizens' initiatives and membership and participation in associations and organisations. A number of questions about voting were asked, such as the most important things affecting the low voter turnout of Finnish expatriates, ways to increase voter turnout, the usefulness of introducing mail and internet voting and a separate constituency for expatriates, frequency of voting in Finnish elections, distance to the closest polling station, reasons for not voting, political party preference, and voting in the elections of the country of residence. Background...
Read more

Methodology

Data collection period

15/09/2014 - 15/12/2014

Country

Sweden, Germany, Great Britain, Spain, Canada, USA

Time dimension

Cross-section

Analysis unit

Individual

Universe

People of Finnish origin aged 18 and over living outside of Finland

Sampling procedure

Probability: Cluster: Stratified random

Kind of data

Quantitative

Data collection mode

Self-administered questionnaire: Web-based (CAWI)

Access

Publisher

Finnish Social Science Data Archive

Publication year

2021

Terms of data access

The dataset is (B) available for research, teaching and study.