Summary information

Study title

Swedish election study 2002

Creator

Holmberg, Sören (Department of Political Science, University of Gothenburg)
Ekengren Oscarsson, Henrik (Department of Political Science, University of Gothenburg)
Statistics Sweden

Study number / PID

snd0812-1-1.0 (SND)

https://doi.org/10.5878/002643 (DOI)

Data access

Restricted

Series

Not available

Abstract

This is the fifteenth election study carried out in Sweden in connection with a Swedish general election. Many of the questions are replications of questions asked in one or several of the previous surveys, but there are also a number of questions not asked before. The interview included questions on how much the respondent takes part of political matters in mass media; political interest in general and political discussions among family and friends; important issues when deciding how to vote; and preferred formation of the government after the election and person preferred as prime minister, as well as opinion on government and opposition 1998-2002 and assumptions how the Social Democrats and the bourgeois parties respectively would manage as governing party/parties 2002-2006. There were also a number of questions on the opinions of the political parties regarding: employment, the Swedish economy, taxes, the conditions for enterprise, environment, energy and nuclear power, social security, care of the elderly, health and medical service, child care, school and education, ethics and moral, law and order, equality, sparsely-populated areas, foreign affairs and security policy, aid to developing countries, the European Union, EMU, refugees and immigration, US war on terrorism, Middle East conflict, and NATO. Political parties and party leaders were to be placed on a scale ranging from strongly dislike to strongly like. Respondents also had to give their opinion on the Social democratic party and the Conservative party and their party leaders with regard to how reliable, inspiring, and sympathetic they are and how much they know about what ordinary people likes. The respondents also had to state how much confidence they had in Swedish politicians. The respondent had to rate a great number of suggestions occuring in the political debate. A number of questions dealt with party preference; vote in the September elections; things important when choosing party; votes in...
Read more

Methodology

Data collection period

Not available

Country

Sweden

Time dimension

Longitudinal: Panel

Analysis unit

Individual

Universe

Individuals aged 18-80 years, residing in Sweden and eligible to vote in the parliamentary election 2002

Sampling procedure

Probability: Simple random

Kind of data

Not available

Data collection mode

Not available

Access

Publisher

Swedish National Data Service

Publication year

2004

Terms of data access

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

Related publications

Not available