98 datasets found
  1. c

    European Values Study 1999/2000 - EVS'99/2000 : Release I - September 2003...

    • datacatalogue.cessda.eu
    • ssh.datastations.nl
    Updated Jan 17, 2025
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    Halman, L.C.J.M. , Subfac. Sociale Wetenschappen (2025). European Values Study 1999/2000 - EVS'99/2000 : Release I - September 2003 (ZA Study 3811) [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.17026/dans-z7s-renb
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    Dataset updated
    Jan 17, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Universiteit van Tilburg
    Authors
    Halman, L.C.J.M. , Subfac. Sociale Wetenschappen
    Description

    The European Values Study is designed to enable cross-national comparison of values, beliefs and attitudes, as well as preferences and priorities, and the changes in time concerning these issues. Uniform questionnaires were used to interview representative samples in 33 European countries: Austria, Belarus, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Great Britain, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Latvia, Malta, Northern Ireland, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Spain, Sweden, Slovakia, Slovenia, Turkey, and the Ukraine. The EVS 1999/2000 is the third wave (after 1981 and 1990) covering the following fields: religion and morality / politics, society and economy / work and leisure-time / primary relations. For more detailed information, and information about updates: see also the EVS website.


    Date Submitted: 2003-09-01
    Date Submitted: 2007-07-30

  2. g

    EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Ukraine

    • search.gesis.org
    • datacatalogue.cessda.eu
    • +2more
    Updated Dec 28, 2012
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    Balakireva, Olga (2012). EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Ukraine [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4232/1.11557
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    application/x-stata-dta(784358), application/x-spss-sav(2090900), application/x-spss-por(1278626)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 28, 2012
    Dataset provided by
    GESIS search
    GESIS Data Archive
    Authors
    Balakireva, Olga
    License

    https://www.gesis.org/en/institute/data-usage-termshttps://www.gesis.org/en/institute/data-usage-terms

    Time period covered
    Dec 1, 1999 - Dec 31, 1999
    Area covered
    Ukraine
    Description

    Moral, religious, societal, political, work, and family values of Europeans.

    Topics:

    Leisure time: importance of areas of life; feeling of happiness; memberships and honorary activities in clubs, parties, organizations, citizens´ initiatives and occupation organizations; interactions in leisure time; tolerance regarding minorities, those of other beliefs and foreigners; inter-human trust; self-effectiveness (scale); general contentment with life (scale).

    Work: importance of selected characteristics of occupational work (scale); personal employment; general work satisfaction (scale); self-determination at work (scale); work ethic (scale); attitude to achievement-based pay and following work instructions without criticism; priority of nationals over foreigners as well as men over women with shortage of jobs; assumed priority of individual or social reasons for the situation of economic need of individuals; freedom of the unemployed to reject a job offer (scale).

    Politics: party preference; attitude to foreign workers in one´s country; fear of the future; assimilation and integration of immigrants; concept of a just society (more welfare state or liberalism, scale); interest in political news in the media; individualism and thinking of the community; interest in politics; political participation; self-assessment on a left-right continuum (scale); self-responsibility or governmental provision (scale); attitude to competition freedom and entrepreneur freedom (scale); satisfaction with democracy; attitude to the current political system of the country and judgment on the political system of the country ten years ago (scale); preference for a democratic political system or for strong leadership of an individual politician (scale); attitude to democracy (scale); loss of national characteristics through unification of Europe.

    Religion: individual or general standard for good and evil; current and perhaps earlier religious denomination; current frequency of church attendance and at the age of 12; importance of religious celebration at birth, marriage and funeral; self-assessment of religiousness; ability of the religious community in moral questions, with problems in family life, spiritual needs and current social problems of the country; belief in God, life after death, hell, heaven, sin, telepathy and reincarnation; belief in God or nihilism (scale); importance of God in one´s own life (scale); comfort and strength through belief; prayer and meditation; frequency of prayer; possession and belief in lucky charms or talisman (scale); reading and observing horoscopes; attitude to separation of church (religion) and state (scale).

    Family and marriage: important criteria for a successful marriage (scale); attitude to marriage and the traditional family structure (scale); attitude to one´s own children (scale); attitude to traditional understanding of one´s role of man and woman in occupation and family (scale); attitude to a traditional or liberal parent-child relation; importance of educational goals; attitude to abortion.

    Society: preference for individual freedom or social equality; post-materialism (scale); preferred social development (scale); attitude to technical progress; trust in institutions; observing individual human rights in the country; attitude to environmental protection (scale); closeness to family, the neighborhood, people in the region, countrymen, Europeans and humanity; closeness to older people, the unemployed, foreigners and handicapped well as readiness to make an effort for these groups; personal reasons for assistance with older people as well as foreigners; identification with the city, the region, the nation, Europe and the world; national pride. morals and sexuality: moral attitudes (tax evasion, theft, use of drugs, lying, bribe money, corruption, euthanasia, suicide, environmental pollution, alcohol at the wheel; scale); moral attitudes to partnership and sexuality (homosexuality, abortion, divorce, promiscuity; scale); assumed spreading of immoral behavior in the population of the country (scale); attitude to punishment dependent on the situation of the culprit or the victim (scale).

    Demography: sex; year of birth; marital status and living together with a partner; number of children; school education; age at termination of school training; employment; superior function and span of control; company size; occupation (ISCO88) and occupational position; length of unemployment; size of hous...

  3. d

    EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Turkey

    • da-ra.de
    Updated Dec 28, 2012
    + more versions
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    EVS (2012). EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Turkey [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4232/1.11556
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 28, 2012
    Dataset provided by
    GESIS Data Archive
    da|ra
    Authors
    EVS
    Time period covered
    Sep 1, 2001 - Oct 1, 2001
    Area covered
    Türkiye
    Description

    Face-to-face interviews with standardized questionnaire

  4. c

    Northern Ireland European Values Survey, 1999

    • datacatalogue.cessda.eu
    • beta.ukdataservice.ac.uk
    Updated Nov 28, 2024
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    Fahey, T.; Sinnott, R., University College Dublin; Hayes, B. C. (2024). Northern Ireland European Values Survey, 1999 [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-4422-1
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 28, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Centre for European Economic and Public Affairs
    Queen
    Economic and Social Research Institute
    Authors
    Fahey, T.; Sinnott, R., University College Dublin; Hayes, B. C.
    Time period covered
    Sep 1, 1999 - Nov 1, 1999
    Area covered
    Ireland, Northern Ireland
    Variables measured
    Individuals, National, Northern Irish adults, Cross-national
    Measurement technique
    Face-to-face interview
    Description

    Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.

    The European Values Study (EVS) and World Values Survey (WVS) series is designed to enable a cross-national, cross-cultural comparison of values and norms on a wide variety of topics and to monitor changes in values and attitudes across the globe. The WVS is one of the world's most extensive and most widely used social surveys. Since 1981, it has captured the views of almost 400,000 respondents in over 110 countries, covering topics including cultural identity, migration, trust, empathy, tolerance, media consumption, political interest, the environment and more.

    These surveys show pervasive changes in what people want out of life and what they believe. To monitor these changes, the EVS/WVS has executed seven waves of surveys to date at various times between 1981 and 2022. Representative national samples of each society's public are interviewed using a standardised questionnaire covering various social, economic, cultural and religious topics. The countries included in these surveys cover the full range from very poor countries to very rich ones, from authoritarian systems to liberal democracies, covering all major cultural zones.

    Further information about each survey series can be found on the EVS and WVS websites.


    Background to the European Values Studies
    The European Values Study (EVS) is a large-scale, cross-national and longitudinal survey of moral, religious, political and social values. The project was designed to investigate the nature and inter-relationship of value systems, their degree of homogeneity, and the extent to which they are subject to change across time.
    To date there have been 3 waves, the first carried out in 1981, the second in 1990 and the third in 1999/2000.
    The 1981 survey was carried out in ten member states of the European Community. After the initial fieldwork the survey was carried out in a further 16 countires (Argentina, Australia, Chile, Canada, Finland, Hungary, Iceland, Japan, Malta, Mexico, Norway, South Africa, South Korea, Sweden, United States and parts of the Soviet Union).
    The 1990 survey was carried out in all European countries as well as the United States and Canada.The third EVS was carried out in Europe.
    Further information can be found on the EVS web pages

    Northern Ireland European Values Survey, 1999
    The aim of this study was the inclusion of Northern Ireland as a fully participant member of the 1999 European Values Study (EVS). The survey was carried out by means of face-to-face interviews with a sample of 1000 randomly-selected adults, representative of the adult population of Northern Ireland. The study was based on an adapted version of the 1999 wave of the EVS, which has now been completed in most countries of western and eastern Europe, including the Republic of Ireland. As in previous EVS studies, the core questions focus on values and attitudes in areas such as religion, ethics, politics, work motivation, family and life-style. In addition to these core elements, however, the Northern Ireland survey also included and additional range of items on aspects of culture and identity peculiar to the island of Ireland. For example, respondents in this survey and the Republic of Ireland EVS wave (not currently held at the UK Data Archive) were questioned about their views on various aspects of the Good Friday Agreement and about their attitudes to national identity. Special care was taken to ensure that these additional questions were relevant within and across the two societies.

    These data are also included in European and World Values Survey Four-wave Integrated Data File, 1981-2004, which is available for online analysis and download. Please see SN: 5488 for details.



    Main Topics:

    Topics covered include attitudes to work, religion, social groups, local communities, environmental protection, voluntary organisations, government, politics and democracy, family and friends, life satisfaction, human needs, marriage, children, concerns over the troubled situation in Northern Ireland, paramilitary violence, the Good Friday Agreement, political developments and devolved government and associated views on national identity. A range of demographic information was also collected.

    Standard Measures
    Previous EVS measures from the 1981 and 1990 studies on values and attitudes in areas such as religion, ethics, politics, work, motivation, family and life-style were used.

  5. c

    EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Integrated Dataset

    • datacatalogue.cessda.eu
    • da-ra.de
    Updated Mar 14, 2023
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    Zulehner, Paul M.; Rotman, David; Titarenko, Larissa; Billiet, Jaak; Dobbelaere, Karel; Bawin, Bernadette; Kerkhofs, Jan; Fotev, Georgy; Marinov, Mario; Baloban, Josip; Rabusic, Ladislav; Gundelach, Peter; Saar, Andrus; Pehkonen, Juhani; Tchernia, Jean-François; Puranen, Bi; Jagodzinski, Wolfgang; Harding, Stephen; Anheier, Helmut; Gari, Aikaterini; Georgas, James; Mylonas, Kostas; Tomka, Miklós; Jónsson, Fridrik H.; Olafsson, Stefan; Fahey, Tony; Sinnott, Richard; Gubert, Renzo; Zepa, Brigita; Alishauskiene, Rasa; Juknevicius, Stanislovas; Estgen, Pol; Legrand, Michel; Abela, Anthony M.; Arts, Wil A.; Hagenaars, Jacques A.P.; Halman, Loek; Luijkx, Ruud; Hayes, Bernadette C.; Jasinska-Kania, Aleksandra; Konieczna, Joanna; Marody, Mira; Cabral, Manuel Villaverde; Ramos, Alice; Vala, Jorge; Pop, Lucien; Voicu, Malina; Zamfir, Catalin; Bashkirova, Elena; Kusá, Zuzana; Malnar, Brina; Tos, Niko; Elzo, Javier; Orizo, Francisco Andrés; Pettersson, Thorleif; Esmer, Yilmaz; Balakireva, Olga (2023). EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Integrated Dataset [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4232/1.10789
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 14, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Lithuanian Institute of Culture and Arts, Lithuania
    Tilburg University, The Netherlands
    Hungarian Religious Research Centre, Hungary
    University of Trento, Italy
    University of Liège, Belgium
    Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium
    University of Deusto, Spain
    Belarus State University, Belarus
    Ukrainian Institute for Social Research, Ukraine
    Trinity College Dublin, Ireland
    University of Athens, Greece
    University of Malta, Malta
    London School of Economics and Political Science, Great Britain
    The Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI), Ireland
    Institute for Social Research, Lithuania
    Masaryk University, Czech Republic
    University of Ljubljana, Slovenia
    Bogazici University, Turkey
    University of Vienna, Austria
    DATA S.A., Spain
    University of Copenhagen, Denmark
    Romanian Academy, Romania
    Queen´s University Belfast, Northern Ireland
    University of Warsaw, Poland
    University of Cologne, Germany
    SeSoPI Centre Intercommunautaire, Luxembourg
    University of Lisbon, Portugal
    Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria
    TNS Gallup Oy, Finland
    Uppsala University, Sweden
    University of Zagreb, Croatia
    ISR Surveys, Great Britain
    University of Iceland, Iceland
    Slovak Academy of Sciences, Slovak Republic
    Baltic Institute of Social Sciences, Riga
    Theseus International Management Institute, France
    Tchernia Etudes Conseil, France
    SAAR POLL, Estonia
    Bashkirova & Partners, Russian Federation
    Authors
    Zulehner, Paul M.; Rotman, David; Titarenko, Larissa; Billiet, Jaak; Dobbelaere, Karel; Bawin, Bernadette; Kerkhofs, Jan; Fotev, Georgy; Marinov, Mario; Baloban, Josip; Rabusic, Ladislav; Gundelach, Peter; Saar, Andrus; Pehkonen, Juhani; Tchernia, Jean-François; Puranen, Bi; Jagodzinski, Wolfgang; Harding, Stephen; Anheier, Helmut; Gari, Aikaterini; Georgas, James; Mylonas, Kostas; Tomka, Miklós; Jónsson, Fridrik H.; Olafsson, Stefan; Fahey, Tony; Sinnott, Richard; Gubert, Renzo; Zepa, Brigita; Alishauskiene, Rasa; Juknevicius, Stanislovas; Estgen, Pol; Legrand, Michel; Abela, Anthony M.; Arts, Wil A.; Hagenaars, Jacques A.P.; Halman, Loek; Luijkx, Ruud; Hayes, Bernadette C.; Jasinska-Kania, Aleksandra; Konieczna, Joanna; Marody, Mira; Cabral, Manuel Villaverde; Ramos, Alice; Vala, Jorge; Pop, Lucien; Voicu, Malina; Zamfir, Catalin; Bashkirova, Elena; Kusá, Zuzana; Malnar, Brina; Tos, Niko; Elzo, Javier; Orizo, Francisco Andrés; Pettersson, Thorleif; Esmer, Yilmaz; Balakireva, Olga
    Time period covered
    Feb 1, 1999 - Oct 1, 2001
    Area covered
    Russian Federation, Poland, Portugal, Lithuania, Estonia, Belgium, Austria, Iceland, Luxembourg, Spain
    Measurement technique
    Face-to-face interviews with standardized questionnaire. In Iceland about a quarter of the respondents were interviewed by telephone. These were respondents in remote areas of the country.
    Description

    The online overview offers comprehensive metadata on the EVS datasets and variables.

    The variable overview of the four EVS waves 1981, 1990, 1999/2000, and 2008 allows for identifying country specific deviations in the question wording within and across the EVS waves.

    This overview can be found at: Online Variable Overview .

    Moral, religious, societal, political, work, and family values of Europeans.

    Topics: The question program is divided in three parts: besides a common question program for all countries there is a voluntary supplement program and further country-specific questions.

    1. Common question program: leisure time: importance of areas of life; feeling of happiness; memberships and honorary activities in clubs, parties, organizations, citizens´ initiatives and occupation organizations; interactions in leisure time; tolerance regarding minorities, those of other beliefs and foreigners; interhuman trust; self-effectiveness (scale); general contentment with life (scale). working world: importance of selected characteristics of occupational work (scale); personal employment; general work satisfaction (scale); self-determination at work (scale); work ethic (scale); attitude to achievement-based pay and following work instructions without criticism; priority of nationals over foreigners as well as men over women with shortage of jobs; assumed priority of individual or social reasons for the situation of economic need of individuals; freedom of the unemployed to reject a job offer (scale). politics: party preference; attitude to foreign workers in one´s country; fear of the future; assimilation and integration of immigrants; concept of a just society (more welfare state or liberalism, scale); interest in political news in the media; individualism and thinking of the community; interest in politics; political participation; self-assessment on a left-right continuum (scale); self-responsibility or governmental provision (scale); attitude to competition freedom and entrepreneur freedom (scale); satisfaction with democracy; attitude to the current political system of the country and judgement on the political system of the country ten years ago (scale); preference for a democratic political system or for strong leadership of an individual politician (scale); attitude to democracy (scale); loss of national characteristics through unification of Europe. religion: individual or general standard for good and evil; current and possibly earlier religious denomination; current frequency of church attendance and at the age of 12; importance of religious celebration at birth, marriage and funeral; self-assessment of religiousness; ability of the religious community in moral questions, with problems in family life, with spiritual needs and current social problems of the country; belief in God, life after death, hell, heaven, sin, telepathy and reincarnation; belief in God or nihilism (scale); importance of God in one´s life (scale); comfort and strength through belief; prayer and Meditation; frequency of prayer; possession and belief in lucky charms or talisman (scale); reading and observing horoscopes; attitude to separation of church (religion) and state (scale). family and marriage: most important criteria for a successful marriage (scale); attitude to marriage and traditional family structure (scale); attitude to one´s own children (scale); attitude to traditional understanding of one´s role of man and woman in occupation and family (scale); attitude to a traditional or liberal parent-child relation; importance of educational goals; attitude to abortion. society: preference for individual freedom or social equality; postmaterialism (scale); preferred social development (scale); attitude to technical progress; trust in institutions; observing individual human rights in the country; attitude to environmental protection (scale); closeness to family, neighborhood, the people in the region, countrymen, Europeans and humanity; closeness to older people, the unemployed, foreigners and handicapped as well as readiness to make an effort for these groups; personal reasons for assistance with older people as well as foreigners; identification with the city, region, the nation, Europe and the world; national pride. morals and sexuality: moral attitudes (tax evasion, theft, use of drugs, lying, bribe money, corruption, euthanasia, suicide, environmental pollution, alcohol at the wheel; scale); moral attitudes to partnership and sexuality (homosexuality, abortion, divorce, promiscuity; scale); assumed spreading of immoral behavior in the population of the country (scale); attitude to punishment dependent on the situation of culprit or victim (scale). Demography: sex; year of birth; marital status and living together with a partner; number of children; school education; age at termination of school training; employment; superior function and span of control; company size; occupation (ISCO88) and occupational position;...
  6. c

    EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Spain

    • datacatalogue.cessda.eu
    • da-ra.de
    Updated Mar 14, 2023
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    Elzo, Javier; Orizo, Francisco Andrés (2023). EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Spain [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4232/1.11554
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Mar 14, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    University of Deusto, Spain
    DATA S.A., Spain
    Authors
    Elzo, Javier; Orizo, Francisco Andrés
    Time period covered
    Mar 1, 1999 - Apr 30, 1999
    Area covered
    Spain
    Measurement technique
    Face-to-face interviews with standardized questionnaire
    Description

    Moral, religious, societal, political, work, and family values of Europeans.

    Topics:

    Leisure time: importance of areas of life; feeling of happiness; memberships and honorary activities in clubs, parties, organizations, citizens´ initiatives and occupation organizations; interactions in leisure time; tolerance regarding minorities, those of other beliefs and foreigners; inter-human trust; self-effectiveness (scale); general contentment with life (scale).

    Work: importance of selected characteristics of occupational work (scale); personal employment; general work satisfaction (scale); self-determination at work (scale); work ethic (scale); attitude to achievement-based pay and following work instructions without criticism; priority of nationals over foreigners as well as men over women with shortage of jobs; assumed priority of individual or social reasons for the situation of economic need of individuals; freedom of the unemployed to reject a job offer (scale).

    Politics: party preference; attitude to foreign workers in one´s country; fear of the future; assimilation and integration of immigrants; concept of a just society (more welfare state or liberalism, scale); interest in political news in the media; individualism and thinking of the community; interest in politics; political participation; self-assessment on a left-right continuum (scale); self-responsibility or governmental provision (scale); attitude to competition freedom and entrepreneur freedom (scale); satisfaction with democracy; attitude to the current political system of the country and judgment on the political system of the country ten years ago (scale); preference for a democratic political system or for strong leadership of an individual politician (scale); attitude to democracy (scale); loss of national characteristics through unification of Europe.

    Religion: individual or general standard for good and evil; current and perhaps earlier religious denomination; current frequency of church attendance and at the age of 12; importance of religious celebration at birth, marriage and funeral; self-assessment of religiousness; ability of the religious community in moral questions, with problems in family life, spiritual needs and current social problems of the country; belief in God, life after death, hell, heaven, sin, telepathy and reincarnation; belief in God or nihilism (scale); importance of God in one´s own life (scale); comfort and strength through belief; prayer and meditation; frequency of prayer; possession and belief in lucky charms or talisman (scale); reading and observing horoscopes; attitude to separation of church (religion) and state (scale).

    Family and marriage: important criteria for a successful marriage (scale); attitude to marriage and the traditional family structure (scale); attitude to one´s own children (scale); attitude to traditional understanding of one´s role of man and woman in occupation and family (scale); attitude to a traditional or liberal parent-child relation; importance of educational goals; attitude to abortion.

    Society: preference for individual freedom or social equality; post-materialism (scale); preferred social development (scale); attitude to technical progress; trust in institutions; observing individual human rights in the country; attitude to environmental protection (scale); closeness to family, the neighborhood, people in the region, countrymen, Europeans and humanity; closeness to older people, the unemployed, foreigners and handicapped well as readiness to make an effort for these groups; personal reasons for assistance with older people as well as foreigners; identification with the city, the region, the nation, Europe and the world; national pride. morals and sexuality: moral attitudes (tax evasion, theft, use of drugs, lying, bribe money, corruption, euthanasia, suicide, environmental pollution, alcohol at the wheel; scale); moral attitudes to partnership and sexuality (homosexuality, abortion, divorce, promiscuity; scale); assumed spreading of immoral behavior in the population of the country (scale); attitude to punishment dependent on the situation of the culprit or the victim (scale).

    Demography: sex; year of birth; marital status and living together with a partner; number of children; school education; age at termination of school training; employment; superior function and span of control; company size; occupation (ISCO88) and occupational position; length of unemployment; size of household; ages of children in household; head of household; characteristics of head of household; household income.

    Additional country specific questions included.

    Interviewer rating: social class of respondent; willingness of respondent to cooperate.

    Also coded: city size; region; date of interview; length of interview.

  7. g

    EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Deutschland

    • search.gesis.org
    • datacatalogue.cessda.eu
    • +2more
    Updated Dec 28, 2012
    + more versions
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    Jagodzinski, Wolfgang (2012). EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Deutschland [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4232/1.11534
    Explore at:
    application/x-stata-dta(1223694), application/x-spss-sav(2625119), application/x-spss-por(2147498)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 28, 2012
    Dataset provided by
    GESIS search
    GESIS Data Archive
    Authors
    Jagodzinski, Wolfgang
    License

    https://www.gesis.org/en/institute/data-usage-termshttps://www.gesis.org/en/institute/data-usage-terms

    Time period covered
    Oct 1, 1999 - Dec 31, 1999
    Area covered
    Germany
    Variables measured
    o6 -, o8 -, v1 -, v2 -, v3 -, v4 -, v5 -, v6 -, v7 -, v8 -, and 388 more
    Description

    Moral, religious, societal, political, work, and family values of Europeans.

    Topics:

    Leisure time: importance of areas of life; feeling of happiness; memberships and honorary activities in clubs, parties, organizations, citizens´ initiatives and occupation organizations; interactions in leisure time; tolerance regarding minorities, those of other beliefs and foreigners; inter-human trust; self-effectiveness (scale); general contentment with life (scale).

    Work: importance of selected characteristics of occupational work (scale); personal employment; general work satisfaction (scale); self-determination at work (scale); work ethic (scale); attitude to achievement-based pay and following work instructions without criticism; priority of nationals over foreigners as well as men over women with shortage of jobs; assumed priority of individual or social reasons for the situation of economic need of individuals; freedom of the unemployed to reject a job offer (scale).

    Politics: party preference; attitude to foreign workers in one´s country; fear of the future; assimilation and integration of immigrants; concept of a just society (more welfare state or liberalism, scale); interest in political news in the media; individualism and thinking of the community; interest in politics; political participation; self-assessment on a left-right continuum (scale); self-responsibility or governmental provision (scale); attitude to competition freedom and entrepreneur freedom (scale); satisfaction with democracy; attitude to the current political system of the country and judgment on the political system of the country ten years ago (scale); preference for a democratic political system or for strong leadership of an individual politician (scale); attitude to democracy (scale); loss of national characteristics through unification of Europe.

    Religion: individual or general standard for good and evil; current and perhaps earlier religious denomination; current frequency of church attendance and at the age of 12; importance of religious celebration at birth, marriage and funeral; self-assessment of religiousness; ability of the religious community in moral questions, with problems in family life, spiritual needs and current social problems of the country; belief in God, life after death, hell, heaven, sin, telepathy and reincarnation; belief in God or nihilism (scale); importance of God in one´s own life (scale); comfort and strength through belief; prayer and meditation; frequency of prayer; possession and belief in lucky charms or talisman (scale); reading and observing horoscopes; attitude to separation of church (religion) and state (scale).

    Family and marriage: important criteria for a successful marriage (scale); attitude to marriage and the traditional family structure (scale); attitude to one´s own children (scale); attitude to traditional understanding of one´s role of man and woman in occupation and family (scale); attitude to a traditional or liberal parent-child relation; importance of educational goals; attitude to abortion.

    Society: preference for individual freedom or social equality; post-materialism (scale); preferred social development (scale); attitude to technical progress; trust in institutions; observing individual human rights in the country; attitude to environmental protection (scale); closeness to family, the neighborhood, people in the region, countrymen, Europeans and humanity; closeness to older people, the unemployed, foreigners and handicapped well as readiness to make an effort for these groups; personal reasons for assistance with older people as well as foreigners; identification with the city, the region, the nation, Europe and the world; national pride. morals and sexuality: moral attitudes (tax evasion, theft, use of drugs, lying, bribe money, corruption, euthanasia, suicide, environmental pollution, alcohol at the wheel; scale); moral attitudes to partnership and sexuality (homosexuality, abortion, divorce, promiscuity; scale); assumed spreading of immoral behavior in the population of the country (scale); attitude to punishment dependent on the situation of the culprit or the victim (scale).

    Demography: sex; year of birth; marital status and living together with a partner; number of children; school education; age at termination of school training; employment; superior function and span of control; company size; occupation (ISCO88) and occupational position; length of unemployment; size of hous...

  8. d

    EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Greece

    • da-ra.de
    • datacatalogue.cessda.eu
    Updated Dec 28, 2012
    + more versions
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    EVS (2012). EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Greece [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4232/1.11536
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Dec 28, 2012
    Dataset provided by
    GESIS Data Archive
    da|ra
    Authors
    EVS
    Time period covered
    Mar 1, 1999 - Jun 30, 1999
    Area covered
    Greece
    Description

    Sampling Procedure Comment: Multi-stage random sample

  9. EVS Trend File 1981-2017 – Sensitive Dataset

    • datacatalogue.cessda.eu
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    Updated Mar 15, 2023
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    Gedeshi, Ilir; Zulehner, Paul M.; Rotman, David; Titarenko, Larissa; Billiet, Jaak; Dobbelaere, Karel; Kerkhofs, Jan; Swyngedouw, Marc; Voyé, Liliane; Fotev, Georgy; Marinov, Mario; Raichev, Andrei; Stoychev, Kancho; Kielty, J.F.; Nevitte, Neil; Baloban, Stjepan; Baloban, Josip; Roudometof, Victor; Rabusic, Ladislav; Rehak, Jan; Gundelach, Peter; Petersen, E.; Riis, Ole; Röhme, Nils; Saar, Andrus; Lotti, Leila; Pehkonen, Juhani; Puranen, Bi; Riffault, Hélène; Stoetzel, Jean; Tchernia, Jean-François; Pachulia, Merab; Jagodzinski, Wolfgang; Klingemann, Hans-Dieter; Köcher, Renate; Noelle-Neumann, Elisabeth; Anheier, Helmut; Barker, David; Harding, Stephen; Heald, Gordon; Timms, Noel; Voas, David; Gari, Aikaterini; Georgas, James; Mylonas, Kostas; Hankiss, Elemer; Manchin, Robert; Rosta, Gergely; Tomka, Miklós; Haraldsson, Olafur; Jónsson, Fridrik H.; Olafsson, Stefan; Breen, Michael; Fahey, Tony; Fogarty, Michael; Kennedy, Kieran; Sinnott, Richard; Whelan, Chris; Abbruzzese, Salvatore; Calvaruso, Claudio; Gubert, Renzo; Rovati, Giancarlo; Zepa, Brigita; Alisauskiene, Rasa; Juknevicius, Stanislovas; Ziliukaite, Ruta; Estgen, Pol; Hausman, Pierre; Legrand, Michel; Petkovska, Antoanela; Abela, Anthony M.; Cachia-Caruana, Richard; Inganuez, Fr. Joe; Troisi, Joseph; Petruti, Doru; Besic, Milos; Arts, Wil A.; de Moor, Ruud; European Values Study; Hagenaars, Jacques A.P.; Halman, Loek; Luijkx, Ruud; Hayes, Bernadette C.; Smith, Alan; Listhaug, Ola; Jasinska-Kania, Aleksandra; Konieczna, Joanna; Marody, Mira; Cabral, Manuel Villaverde; Franca, Luis de; Ramos, Alice; Vala, Jorge; Pop, Lucien; Voicu, Malina; Zamfir, Catalin; Bashkirova, Elena; Gredelj, Stjepan; Kusá, Zuzana; Malnar, Brina; Tos, Niko; Elzo, Javier; Orizo, Francisco Andrés; Silvestre Cabrera, María; Bush, Karin; Wallman-Lundåsen, Susanne; Pettersson, Thorleif; Joye, Dominique; Esmer, Yilmaz; Balakireva, Olga; Inglehart, Ronald; Rosenberg, Florence; Sullivan, Edward; Pachulia, Merab; Poghosyan, Gevorg; Kritzinger, Sylvia; Kolenović-Đapo, Jadranka; Baloban, Josip; Frederiksen, Morten; Saar, Erki; Ketola, Kimmo; Wolf, Christof; Pachulia, Merab; Bréchon, Pierre; Jónsdóttir, Guðbjörg A.; Komar, Olivera; Reeskens, Tim; Jenssen, Anders T.; Soboleva, Natalia; Voicu, Bogdan; Strapcová, Katarina; Bešić, Miloš; Uhan, Samo; Ernst Stähli, Michèle; Mieriņa, Inta (2023). EVS Trend File 1981-2017 – Sensitive Dataset [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4232/1.14022
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Mar 15, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Gallup, Inc.http://gallup.com/
    Faculty of Political Sciences, University of Belgrade, Serbia
    De Facto Consultancy, Podgorica, Montenegro
    Faculty of Philosophy, University of Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
    GORBI (Georgian Opinion Research Business International), Tbilisi, Georgia
    Research institute for Quality of Life, Romanian Academy of Science, Bucharest, Romania
    Faculty of Social Sciences, Public Opinion and Mass Communication Research, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia
    Department of Social Sciences, Mid Sweden University, Sundsvall, Sweden
    Department of Sociology, Tilburg University, Tilburg, Netherlands
    Statistics Denmark, Copenhagen, Denmark
    University of Latvia, Riga, Latvia
    Laboratory for Comparative Social Research, Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russia
    Kirkon tutkimuskeskus, Tampere, Finland
    Institute Economy and Prognoses, National Academy of Ukraine, Kiev, Ukraine
    Department of Sociology, Vilnius University, Lithuania
    Social Science Research Institute, University of Iceland, Reykjavik, Iceland
    Department of Social Sciences, GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Mannheim, Germany
    Saar Poll, Tallinn, Estonia
    SORGU, Baku, Azerbaijan
    Department of Sociology and Political Science, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway
    Department of Government, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria
    FORS, Swiss Foundation for Research in Social Sciences, Université de Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland
    Center for Economic and Social Studies (CESS), Albania
    Institute of Philosophy, Sociology and Law, Armenian National Academy of Sciences, Yerevan, Armenia
    Institute for Sociology, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Bratislava, Slovak Republic
    Catholic Faculty of Theology, University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia
    Department of Social Science, University College London, Great Britain
    Faculty for Social Wellbeing, New Bulgarian University, Sofia, Bulgaria
    Institut d’études politiques de Grenoble, Grenoble, France
    University of Limerick, Ireland
    Bashkirova & Partners, Russian Federation
    Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium
    BBSS Gallup International, Bulgaria
    Institute of Marketing and Polls IMAS-INC, Republic of Moldova
    University of Leicester, Great Britain
    The Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI), Ireland
    Institute for Social Research, Lithuania
    Institut für Demoskopie Allensbach, Germany
    Faits et Opinions, France
    Uppsala University, Sweden
    University of Zagreb, Croatia
    University of Deusto, Spain
    Great Britain
    Tchernia Etudes Conseil, France
    SeSoPI Centre Intercommunautaire, Luxembourg
    University of Lisbon, Portugal
    CEPS/INSTEAD, Luxembourg
    SAAR POLL, Estonia
    University of Cyprus, Cyprus
    University of Ljubljana, Slovenia
    Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary
    Trinity College Dublin, Ireland
    University of Athens, Greece
    University of Ulster, Northern Ireland
    Bogazici University; Bahcesehir University, Turkey
    University of Iceland, Iceland
    Slovak Academy of Sciences, Slovak Republic
    Tilburg University, The Netherlands
    Hungarian Religious Research Centre, Hungary
    University of Trento, Italy
    Belarus State University, Belarus
    Masaryk University, Czech Republic
    Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate (CARA), USA
    Berlin Science Center for Social Research, Germany
    University of Vienna, Austria
    Pázmány Péter Catholic University, Hungary
    Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, Italy
    Theseus International Management Institute, France
    University of Michigan, USA
    Ss. Cyril and Methodius University, Republic of Macedonia
    Aarhus University, Denmark
    SIFO, Sweden
    Swiss Foundation for Research in Social Sciences (FORS), University of Lausanne, Switzerland
    DATA S.A.; Centro de Investigaciones Sociológicas, Spain
    Queen´s University Belfast, Northern Ireland
    University of Warsaw, Poland
    University of Cologne, Germany
    University of Copenhagen, Denmark
    ISR, Great Britain
    University of Belgrade, Serbia
    (Armenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Northern Cyprus)
    University of Calgary, Canada
    University of Trondheim; Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway
    Lithuanian Institute of Culture and Arts, Lithuania
    Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria
    TNS Gallup Oy, Finland
    Czech Republic
    University of Montenegro, Republic of Montenegro
    Baltic Institute of Social Sciences, Latvia
    Georgian Opinion Research Business International (GORBI), Georgia
    University of Malta, Malta
    London School of Economics and Political Science, Great Britain
    Romanian Academy, Romania
    Malta
    Authors
    Gedeshi, Ilir; Zulehner, Paul M.; Rotman, David; Titarenko, Larissa; Billiet, Jaak; Dobbelaere, Karel; Kerkhofs, Jan; Swyngedouw, Marc; Voyé, Liliane; Fotev, Georgy; Marinov, Mario; Raichev, Andrei; Stoychev, Kancho; Kielty, J.F.; Nevitte, Neil; Baloban, Stjepan; Baloban, Josip; Roudometof, Victor; Rabusic, Ladislav; Rehak, Jan; Gundelach, Peter; Petersen, E.; Riis, Ole; Röhme, Nils; Saar, Andrus; Lotti, Leila; Pehkonen, Juhani; Puranen, Bi; Riffault, Hélène; Stoetzel, Jean; Tchernia, Jean-François; Pachulia, Merab; Jagodzinski, Wolfgang; Klingemann, Hans-Dieter; Köcher, Renate; Noelle-Neumann, Elisabeth; Anheier, Helmut; Barker, David; Harding, Stephen; Heald, Gordon; Timms, Noel; Voas, David; Gari, Aikaterini; Georgas, James; Mylonas, Kostas; Hankiss, Elemer; Manchin, Robert; Rosta, Gergely; Tomka, Miklós; Haraldsson, Olafur; Jónsson, Fridrik H.; Olafsson, Stefan; Breen, Michael; Fahey, Tony; Fogarty, Michael; Kennedy, Kieran; Sinnott, Richard; Whelan, Chris; Abbruzzese, Salvatore; Calvaruso, Claudio; Gubert, Renzo; Rovati, Giancarlo; Zepa, Brigita; Alisauskiene, Rasa; Juknevicius, Stanislovas; Ziliukaite, Ruta; Estgen, Pol; Hausman, Pierre; Legrand, Michel; Petkovska, Antoanela; Abela, Anthony M.; Cachia-Caruana, Richard; Inganuez, Fr. Joe; Troisi, Joseph; Petruti, Doru; Besic, Milos; Arts, Wil A.; de Moor, Ruud; European Values Study; Hagenaars, Jacques A.P.; Halman, Loek; Luijkx, Ruud; Hayes, Bernadette C.; Smith, Alan; Listhaug, Ola; Jasinska-Kania, Aleksandra; Konieczna, Joanna; Marody, Mira; Cabral, Manuel Villaverde; Franca, Luis de; Ramos, Alice; Vala, Jorge; Pop, Lucien; Voicu, Malina; Zamfir, Catalin; Bashkirova, Elena; Gredelj, Stjepan; Kusá, Zuzana; Malnar, Brina; Tos, Niko; Elzo, Javier; Orizo, Francisco Andrés; Silvestre Cabrera, María; Bush, Karin; Wallman-Lundåsen, Susanne; Pettersson, Thorleif; Joye, Dominique; Esmer, Yilmaz; Balakireva, Olga; Inglehart, Ronald; Rosenberg, Florence; Sullivan, Edward; Pachulia, Merab; Poghosyan, Gevorg; Kritzinger, Sylvia; Kolenović-Đapo, Jadranka; Baloban, Josip; Frederiksen, Morten; Saar, Erki; Ketola, Kimmo; Wolf, Christof; Pachulia, Merab; Bréchon, Pierre; Jónsdóttir, Guðbjörg A.; Komar, Olivera; Reeskens, Tim; Jenssen, Anders T.; Soboleva, Natalia; Voicu, Bogdan; Strapcová, Katarina; Bešić, Miloš; Uhan, Samo; Ernst Stähli, Michèle; Mieriņa, Inta
    Time period covered
    Mar 1, 1981 - Oct 1, 2021
    Area covered
    France, Bulgaria, Hungary
    Measurement technique
    Face-to-face interview: Computer-assisted (CAPI/CAMI), Face-to-face interview: Paper-and-pencil (PAPI), Self-administered questionnaire: Paper, Self-administered questionnaire: Web-based (CAWI), Telephone interview: Computer-assisted (CATI), Mode of collection: mixed modeFace-to-face interview: CAPI (Computer Assisted Personal Interview)Face-to-face interview: PAPI (Paper and Pencil Interview)Telephone interview: CATI (Computer Assisted Telephone Interview)Self-administered questionnaire: CAWI (Computer-Assisted Web Interview)Self-administered questionnaire: PaperEVS 2017: In all countries, fieldwork was conducted on the basis of detailed and uniform instructions prepared by the EVS advisory groups. The main mode in EVS 2017 is face to face (interviewer-administered). An alternative self-administered form was possible but as a parallel mixed mode, i.e. there was no choice for the respondent between modes: either s/he was assigned to face to face, either s/he was assigned to web or web/mail format. In all countries included in the first pre-release, the EVS questionnaire was administered as face-to-face interview (CAPI or/and PAPI).The EVS 2017 Master Questionnaire was provided in English and each national Programme Director had to ensure that the questionnaire was translated into all the languages spoken by 5% or more of the population in the country. A central team monitored the translation process by means of the Translation Management Tool (TMT), developed by CentERdata (Tilburg).EVS 2008: Face-to-face interviews with standardized questionnaire. In all countries, fieldwork was conducted on the basis of detailed and uniform instructions prepared by the EVS advisory groups. The EVS questionnaires were administered as face-to-face interviews in the appropriate national language(s). As far as the data capture is concerned, CAPI or PAPI was used in nearly all countries. Exceptions are Finland (internet panel) and Sweden (postal survey). The English basic questionnaire was translated into other languages by means of the questionnaire translation system WebTrans, a web-based translation platform designed by Gallup Europe. The whole translation process was closely monitored and quasi-automated documented (see EVS (2010): EVS 2008 Guidelines and Recommendations. GESIS-Technical Reports 2010/16. Retrieved from <a href=http://www.europeanvaluesstudy.eu/ target=_blank> EVS webpage </a>.EVS 1999: Face-to-face interviews with standardized questionnaire. In Iceland about a quarter of the respondents were interviewed by telephone. These were respondents in remote areas of the country.EVS 1990: Personal interview with standardized questionnaireEVS 1981: Personal interview with standardized questionnaire
    Description

    The European Values Study is a large-scale, cross-national and longitudinal survey research program on how Europeans think about family, work, religion, politics, and society. Repeated every nine years in an increasing number of countries, the survey provides insights into the ideas, beliefs, preferences, attitudes, values, and opinions of citizens all over Europe.

    The EVS Trend File 1981-2017 is constructed from the five EVS waves and covers almost 40 years. In altogether 160 surveys, more than 224.000 respondents from 48 countries/regions were interviewed. It is based on the updated data of the EVS Longitudinal Data File 1981-2008 (v.3.1.0) and the current EVS 2017 Integrated Dataset (v.5.0.0).

    For the EVS Trend File, a Restricted-Use File (ZA7504) is available in addition to the (factually anonymised) Scientific-Use File (ZA7503). The EVS Trend File – Sensitive Dataset (ZA7504) is provided as an add-on file. In addition to a small set of admin and protocol variables needed to merge with the SUF data, the Sensitive Dataset contains the following variables that could not be included in the scientific-use file due to their sensitive nature:

    W005_3 Job profession/industry (3-digit ISCO88) - spouse/partner EVS 2008 W005_3_01 Job profession/industry (3-digit ISCO08) - spouse/partner EVS 2017 W005_4 Job profession/industry (4-digit ISCO88) - spouse/partner EVS 2008 X035_3 Job profession/industry (3-digit ISCO88) – respondent EVS 1999, EVS 2008 X035_3_01 Job profession/industry (3-digit ISCO08) - respondent EVS 2017 X035_4 Job profession/industry (4-digit ISCO88) – respondent EVS 1999, EVS 2008 x048c_n3 Region where the interview was conducted (NUTS-3): NUTS version 2006 EVS 2008 X048J_N3 Region where the interview was conducted (NUTS-3): NUTS version 2016 EVS 2017 X049 Size of town (8 categories) EVS 2008, EVS 2017

    Detailed information on the anonymization process in the EVS Trend File is provided in the EVS Trend File Variable Report.
    Study number; version; Digital Object Identifier, EVS-wave; country (ISO 3166-1 Numeric code); original respondent number; unified respondent number; country (ISO 3166-1 Alpha-2 code); country - wave; job profession/industry (3-digit ISCO88) - spouse/partner; job profession/industry (3-digit ISCO08) - spouse/partner; job profession/industry (4-digit ISCO88) - spouse/partner; job profession/industry (3-digit ISCO88) - respondent; job profession/industry (3-digit ISCO08) - respondent; job profession/industry (4-digit ISCO88) - respondent; region where the interview was conducted (NUTS-3): NUTS version 2006; region where the interview was conducted (NUTS-3): NUTS version 2016; size of town (8 categories).

  10. p

    European Values Study 2017: Integrated Dataset (EVS 2017)

    • pollux-fid.de
    • datacatalogue.cessda.eu
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    Updated 2022
    + more versions
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    Rovati, Giancarlo (2022). European Values Study 2017: Integrated Dataset (EVS 2017) [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4232/1.13897
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    2022
    Dataset provided by
    Department of Sociology, Pázmány Péter Catholic University, Budapest, Hungary
    Rabušic, Ladislav
    Bréchon, Pierre
    Bešić, Miloš
    Petkovska, Antoanela
    Rovati, Giancarlo
    Center for Economic and Social Studies (CESS), Tirana, Albania
    Silvestre Cabrera, María
    De Facto Consultancy, Podgorica, Montenegro
    Department of Sociology, Vilnius University, Lithuania
    Poghosyan, Gevorg
    Statistics Denmark, Copenhagen, Denmark
    University of Latvia, Riga, Latvia
    Department of Sociology, Ss. Cyril and Methodius University, Skopje, North Macedonia
    Institute Economy and Prognoses, National Academy of Ukraine, Department of Monitoring Research of the Social and Economic Process, Kiev, Ukraine
    Social Science Research Institute, University of Iceland, Reykjavik, Iceland
    Kritzinger, Sylvia
    Voas, David
    Instituto de Ciências Sociais, Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal
    Frederiksen, Morten
    Faculty of Philosophy, University of Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
    Department of Social Sciences, GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Mannheim, Germany
    Saar Poll, Tallinn, Estonia
    GORBI (Georgian Opinion Research Business International), Tbilisi, Georgia
    Mieriņa, Inta
    The Center of Sociological and Political Research, Belarus State University, Minsk, Belarus
    Faculty of Political Sciences and Sociology, Deusto University, Bilbao, Spain
    Laboratory for Comparative Social Research, Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russia
    Jónsdóttir, Guðbjörg A.
    Faculty of Social Sciences, Public Opinion and Mass Communication Research, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia
    Department of Social Sciences, Mid Sweden University, Sundsvall, Sweden
    Department of Sociology, Tilburg University, Tilburg, Netherlands
    Soboleva, Natalia
    Institute of Sociology, University of Warsaw
    Faculty of Social Studies, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic
    FORS, Swiss Foundation for Research in Social Sciences, Université de Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland
    Catholic Faculty of Theology, University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia
    Ernst Stähli, Michèle
    Kirkon tutkimuskeskus, Tampere, Finland
    Department of Social Science, University College London, Great Britain
    Faculty for Social Wellbeing, New Bulgarian University, Sofia, Bulgaria
    Wallman-Lundåsen, Susanne
    Catholic Faculty of Theology, University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia (since September 2019)
    Saar, Erki
    Ketola, Kimmo
    Ziliukaite, Ruta
    Voicu, Bogdan
    Strapcová, Katarina
    Institute of Philosophy, Sociology and Law, Armenian National Academy of Sciences, Yerevan, Armenia
    Institute for Sociology, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Bratislava, Slovak Republic
    Gedeshi, Ilir
    Marody, Mirosława
    Reeskens, Tim
    Komar, Olivera
    Jenssen, Anders T.
    Institut d'études politiques de Grenoble, Grenoble, France
    Rosta, Gergely
    Pachulia, Merab
    Wolf, Christof
    Faculty of Political Sciences, University of Belgrade, Serbia
    Baloban, Stjepan
    Uhan, Samo
    Kolenović-Đapo, Jadranka
    SORGU, Baku, Azerbaijan
    Department of Sociology and Political Science, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway
    Department of Government, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria
    Department of Sociology, Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, Milan, Italy
    Research institute for Quality of Life, Romanian Academy of Science, Bucharest, Romania
    Rotman, David
    Fotev, Georgy
    Balakireva, Olga
    Ramos, Alice
    Baloban, Josip
    Description

    Die European Values Study ist ein groß angelegtes, länderübergreifendes und längsschnittliches Umfrage-Forschungsprogramm zu der Frage, wie Europäer über Familie, Arbeit, Religion, Politik und Gesellschaft denken. Die Umfrage wird alle neun Jahre in einer wachsenden Zahl von Ländern wiederholt und bietet Einblicke in die Ideen, Überzeugungen, Präferenzen, Einstellungen, Werte und Meinungen der Bürger in ganz Europa.

    Wie die vorhergehenden Erhebungen in den Jahren 1981, 1990, 1999 und 2008 konzentriert sich auch die fünfte EVS-Welle weiterhin auf ein breites Spektrum von Werten. Die Fragen sind zwischen den Wellen und Regionen in hohem Maße vergleichbar, so dass sich der EVS für Forschungsarbeiten zur Untersuchung von Trends im Zeitverlauf eignet.

    Mit der neuen Welle wurden die methodischen Standards gestärkt. Das full release des EVS 2017 enthält Daten und Dokumentationen von insgesamt 37 teilnehmenden Ländern. Weitere Informationen finden Sie auf der Website des EVS.

    Moralische, religiöse, gesellschaftliche, politische, berufliche und familiäre Werte der Europäer.

    Themen: 1. Wahrnehmungen des Lebens: Bedeutung von Arbeit, Familie, Freunden und Bekannten, Freizeit, Politik und Religion; Glück; Selbsteinschätzung der eigenen Gesundheit; Mitgliedschaften in Freiwilligenorganisationen (religiöse oder kirchliche Organisationen, kulturelle Aktivitäten, Gewerkschaften, politische Parteien oder Gruppen, Umwelt, Ökologie, Tierrechte, Berufsverbände, Sport, Freizeit oder andere Gruppen, keine); aktive oder inaktive Mitgliedschaft in humanitären oder karitativen Organisationen, Verbraucherorganisationen, Selbsthilfegruppen oder gegenseitige Unterstützung; Freiwilligenarbeit in den letzten sechs Monaten; Toleranz gegenüber Minderheiten (Menschen anderer Rassen, starke Trinker, Einwanderer, Ausländer, Drogenabhängige, Homosexuelle, Christen, Muslime, Juden und Zigeuner - soziale Distanz); Vertrauen in Menschen; Einschätzung von fairem und hilfsbereitem Verhalten; interne oder externe Kontrolle; Lebenszufriedenheit; Bedeutung von Bildungszielen: wünschenswerte Eigenschaften von Kindern.

    2. Arbeit: Einstellung zur Arbeit (Arbeit wird zur Entwicklung von Talenten benötigt, Geld ohne Arbeit zu erhalten, ist demütigend, Menschen werden faul, wenn sie nicht arbeiten, Arbeit ist eine Pflicht gegenüber der Gesellschaft, Arbeit steht immer an erster Stelle); Bedeutung ausgewählter Aspekte der beruflichen Arbeit; Vorrang von Einheimischen vor Ausländern sowie Männern vor Frauen im Job.

    3. Religion und Moral: Religionsgemeinschaft; aktuelle und ehemalige Religionsgemeinschaft; Kirchgangshäufigkeit derzeit und im Alter von 12 Jahren; Selbsteinschätzung der Religiosität; Glaube an Gott, Leben nach dem Tod, Hölle, Himmel und Wiedergeburt; persönlicher Gott vs. Geist oder Lebenskraft; Bedeutung Gottes im eigenen Leben (10-Punkte-Skala); Häufigkeit von Gebeten; Moralvorstellungen (Skala: Inanspruchnahme von staatlichen Leistungen ohne Anspruch, Steuerbetrug, Einnahme von weichen Drogen, Annehmen von Bestechungsgeldern, Homosexualität, Abtreibung, Scheidung, Sterbehilfe, Selbstmord, Barzahlung zur Vermeidung von Steuern, Gelegenheitssex, Schwarzfahren im öffentlichen Verkehr, Prostitution, In-vitro-Fertilisation, politische Gewalt, Todesstrafe).

    4. Familie: Vertrauen in die Familie; wichtigste Kriterien für eine erfolgreiche Ehe oder Partnerschaft (Treue, angemessenes Einkommen, gutes Wohnen, Aufteilung der Haushaltsarbeit, Kinder, Zeit für Freunde und persönliche Hobbys); Ehe ist eine veraltete Institution; Einstellung zum traditionellen Verständnis der Rolle von Mann und Frau in Beruf und Familie (Geschlechterrollen); homosexuelle Paare sind ebenso gute Eltern wie andere Paare; Verpflichtung gegenüber der Gesellschaft, Kinder zu bekommen; Verantwortung von erwachsenen Kindern für ihre Eltern, wenn sie langfristig betreut werden müssen; Hauptziel im Leben die eigenen Eltern stolz zu machen.

    5. Politik und Gesellschaft: Politikinteresse; politische Partizipation; Präferenz für individuelle Freiheit oder soziale Gleichheit; Selbsteinschätzung auf einem Links-rechts Kontinuum (10-Punkte-Skala); individuelle vs. staatliche Verantwortung für die Bereitstellung; Übernahme jedes Jobs vs. Recht auf Ablehnung eines Jobs durch Arbeitslose; Wettbewerb gut vs. schädlich für Menschen; gleiche Einkommen vs. Anreize für individuelle Anstrengungen; privates vs. Staatseigentum von Wirtschaft und Industrie; Postmaterialismus (Skala); wichtigste Ziele des Landes für die nächsten zehn Jahre; Bereitschaft, für das Land zu kämpfen; Erwartung der zukünftigen Entwicklung (weniger Bedeutung der Arbeit und größere Achtung der Autorität); Institutionenvertrauen; wesentliche Merkmale der Demokratie; Bedeutung der Demokratie für den Befragten; Bewertung der Demokratie im eigenen Land; Zufriedenheit mit dem politischen System im Land; bevorzugte Art des politischen Systems (starker Führer, Expertenentscheidungen, Armee sollte das Land regieren, oder Demokratie); Wahlbeteiligung bei Wahlen auf lokaler, nationaler und europäischer Ebene; politische Partei mit der größten Anziehungskraft; andere politische Partei, die am besten gefällt; Bewertung der Wahlen des Landes (Stimmen werden fair ausgezählt, Oppositionskandidaten werden am Arbeiten gehindert, Fernsehnachrichten begünstigen die Regierungspartei, Wählerbestechung, faire Berichterstattung über Wahlen, faire Wahlbeamte, reiche Menschen kaufen Wahlen, Wähler werden von Gewalt bei den Wahlen bedroht); Meinung zum Recht auf Videoüberwachung in öffentlichen Bereichen, Überwachung aller E-Mails und aller anderen im Internet ausgetauschten Informationen, Sammeln von Informationen über jeden im Land ohne dessen Wissen; Interesse an Politik in den Medien; Besorgnis über die Lebensbedingungen der Menschen in der Nachbarschaft, der Menschen in der Region, der Landsleute, der Europäer, aller Menschen weltweit, älterer Menschen, Arbeitsloser, Einwanderer, kranker und behinderter Menschen; gesellschaftliche Ziele (Beseitigung von Einkommensungleichheiten, Grundsicherung für alle, Anerkennung von Menschen nach Verdiensten, Schutz vor Terrorismus).

    6. Nationale Identität: Vertrauen in Menschen aus verschiedenen Gruppen (Nachbarschaft, persönlich bekannte Personen, Menschen, die man zum ersten Mal trifft, Menschen einer anderen Religion und Menschen einer anderen Nationalität); geografische Gruppe, der sich der Befragte zugehörig fühlt (Stadt, Region, Land, Europa, Welt); Staatsbürgerschaft; Nationalstolz; Bewertung des Einflusses von Einwanderern auf die Entwicklung des Landes; Einstellung gegenüber Einwanderern und ihren Bräuchen und Traditionen (Arbeitsplatzabbau, zunehmende Kriminalitätsprobleme, Belastung des Sozialsystems des Landes, ihre unterschiedlichen Bräuche und Traditionen erhalten vs. Bräuche übernehmen); wichtige Aspekte der nationalen Identität (im Land geboren worden zu sein, die politischen Institutionen und Gesetze des Landes zu respektieren, Abstammung des Landes, Landessprache sprechen, nationale Kultur teilen); wichtige Aspekte der europäischen Identität (in Europa geboren worden zu sein, europäische Abstammung, Christ sein, europäische Kultur teilen); Einstellung gegenüber der Erweiterung der Europäischen Union.

    7. Umwelt: Einstellung zur Umwelt (Skala: Bereitschaft, einen Teil des eigenen Einkommens für die Umwelt zu geben, zu schwierig, viel für die Umwelt zu tun, wichtigere Dinge im Leben als der Umweltschutz, eigene Aktivitäten sind nutzlos, solange andere nicht das Gleiche für die Umwelt tun, Behauptungen über Umweltgefahren sind übertrieben); Schutz der Umwelt vs. Wirtschaftswachstum.

    Demographie: Geschlecht; Alter (Geburtsjahr); im Land des Interviews geboren; Geburtsland; Einwanderungsjahr; aktueller rechtlicher Familienstand; Zusammenleben mit dem Partner vor der Heirat oder vor der Eintragung der Partnerschaft; Zusammenleben mit einem Partner; feste Beziehung; Zusammenleben mit Eltern oder Schwiegereltern; Anzahl der Kinder im Haushalt und außerhalb des Haushalts; Anzahl der Personen im Haushalt (Haushaltsgröße); Alter der jüngsten Person im Haushalt; Alter bei Abschluss der Ausbildung; höchster Bildungsgrad (ISCED 97); Beschäftigungsstatus; Beschäftigung oder Selbständigkeit in der letzten Beschäftigung; derzeitige oder letzte Haupttätigkeit; Beruf (ISCO-08, SIOPS-08, ISEI-08, ESEC-08, EGP-11); Anzahl der Mitarbeiter (Unternehmensgröße); Vorgesetztenfunktion und Anzahl der beaufsichtigten Personen; Berufssektor (Regierung oder öffentliche Einrichtung, Privatwirtschaft oder Industrie oder private gemeinnützige Einrichtung); Arbeitslosigkeit länger als drei Monate; Abhängigkeit von der sozialen Sicherung in den letzten fünf Jahren; Höhe des Haushaltseinkommens (wöchentlich, monatlich, jährlich).

    Angaben zum Partner/Ehepartner: im Land des Interviews geboren; Geburtsland; höchster Bildungsstand (ISCED 97); Beschäftigungsstatus; Beschäftigung oder Selbständigkeit in der letzten Stelle; derzeitige oder letzte Haupttätigkeit; Beruf (ISCO-08, SIOPS-08, ISEI-08, ESEC-08, EGP-11); Anzahl der Mitarbeiter (Unternehmensgröße); Vorgesetztenfunktion und Anzahl der beaufsichtigten Personen.

    Informationen über die Eltern des Befragten: Vater und Mutter im Land des Interviews geboren; Geburtsland von Vater und Mutter; Höhe des Haushaltseinkommens; höchster Bildungsstand von Vater und Mutter (ISCED 97); Beschäftigungsstatus von Vater und Mutter, als der Befragten 14 Jahre alt war; Berufsgruppe des Hauptverdieners im Alter von 14 Jahren; ; Charakterisierung der Eltern, als der Befragte 14 Jahre alt war (Skala: las gerne Bücher, diskutierte mit seinem Kind zu Hause über Politik, verfolgte gerne die Nachrichten, hatte Probleme,

  11. c

    EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Estonia

    • datacatalogue.cessda.eu
    • da-ra.de
    Updated Mar 14, 2023
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    Saar, Andrus (2023). EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Estonia [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4232/1.11531
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 14, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    SAAR POLL, Estonia
    Authors
    Saar, Andrus
    Time period covered
    Oct 1, 1999 - Oct 31, 1999
    Area covered
    Estonia
    Measurement technique
    Face-to-face interviews with standardized questionnaire
    Description

    Moral, religious, societal, political, work, and family values of Europeans.

    Topics:

    Leisure time: importance of areas of life; feeling of happiness; memberships and honorary activities in clubs, parties, organizations, citizens´ initiatives and occupation organizations; interactions in leisure time; tolerance regarding minorities, those of other beliefs and foreigners; inter-human trust; self-effectiveness (scale); general contentment with life (scale).

    Work: importance of selected characteristics of occupational work (scale); personal employment; general work satisfaction (scale); self-determination at work (scale); work ethic (scale); attitude to achievement-based pay and following work instructions without criticism; priority of nationals over foreigners as well as men over women with shortage of jobs; assumed priority of individual or social reasons for the situation of economic need of individuals; freedom of the unemployed to reject a job offer (scale).

    Politics: party preference; attitude to foreign workers in one´s country; fear of the future; assimilation and integration of immigrants; concept of a just society (more welfare state or liberalism, scale); interest in political news in the media; individualism and thinking of the community; interest in politics; political participation; self-assessment on a left-right continuum (scale); self-responsibility or governmental provision (scale); attitude to competition freedom and entrepreneur freedom (scale); satisfaction with democracy; attitude to the current political system of the country and judgment on the political system of the country ten years ago (scale); preference for a democratic political system or for strong leadership of an individual politician (scale); attitude to democracy (scale); loss of national characteristics through unification of Europe.

    Religion: individual or general standard for good and evil; current and perhaps earlier religious denomination; current frequency of church attendance and at the age of 12; importance of religious celebration at birth, marriage and funeral; self-assessment of religiousness; ability of the religious community in moral questions, with problems in family life, spiritual needs and current social problems of the country; belief in God, life after death, hell, heaven, sin, telepathy and reincarnation; belief in God or nihilism (scale); importance of God in one´s own life (scale); comfort and strength through belief; prayer and meditation; frequency of prayer; possession and belief in lucky charms or talisman (scale); reading and observing horoscopes; attitude to separation of church (religion) and state (scale).

    Family and marriage: important criteria for a successful marriage (scale); attitude to marriage and the traditional family structure (scale); attitude to one´s own children (scale); attitude to traditional understanding of one´s role of man and woman in occupation and family (scale); attitude to a traditional or liberal parent-child relation; importance of educational goals; attitude to abortion.

    Society: preference for individual freedom or social equality; post-materialism (scale); preferred social development (scale); attitude to technical progress; trust in institutions; observing individual human rights in the country; attitude to environmental protection (scale); closeness to family, the neighborhood, people in the region, countrymen, Europeans and humanity; closeness to older people, the unemployed, foreigners and handicapped well as readiness to make an effort for these groups; personal reasons for assistance with older people as well as foreigners; identification with the city, the region, the nation, Europe and the world; national pride. morals and sexuality: moral attitudes (tax evasion, theft, use of drugs, lying, bribe money, corruption, euthanasia, suicide, environmental pollution, alcohol at the wheel; scale); moral attitudes to partnership and sexuality (homosexuality, abortion, divorce, promiscuity; scale); assumed spreading of immoral behavior in the population of the country (scale); attitude to punishment dependent on the situation of the culprit or the victim (scale).

    Demography: sex; year of birth; marital status and living together with a partner; number of children; school education; age at termination of school training; employment; superior function and span of control; company size; occupation (ISCO88) and occupational position; length of unemployment; size of household; ages of children in household; head of household; characteristics of head of household; household income.

    Additional country specific questions included.

    Also coded: city size; region.

  12. d

    EVS - European Values Study 1999/2000 (release 2, May 2006) - Turkey

    • da-ra.de
    Updated May 30, 2006
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    Yilmaz Esmer (2006). EVS - European Values Study 1999/2000 (release 2, May 2006) - Turkey [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4232/1.3808
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    Dataset updated
    May 30, 2006
    Dataset provided by
    GESIS Data Archive
    da|ra
    Authors
    Yilmaz Esmer
    Time period covered
    1999
    Area covered
    Türkiye
    Description

    Representative multi-stage random sample of the adult population 18 years old and older.

  13. d

    EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Finland

    • da-ra.de
    • dbk.gesis.org
    Updated Dec 28, 2012
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    EVS (2012). EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Finland [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4232/1.11532
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 28, 2012
    Dataset provided by
    GESIS Data Archive
    da|ra
    Authors
    EVS
    Time period covered
    Sep 1, 1999 - Oct 31, 2000
    Area covered
    Finland
    Description

    Face-to-face interviews with standardized questionnaire

  14. g

    EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Hungary

    • dbk.gesis.org
    • datacatalogue.cessda.eu
    • +1more
    Updated Jan 26, 2014
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    Tomka, Miklós (2014). EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Hungary [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4232/1.11537
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    Dataset updated
    Jan 26, 2014
    Dataset provided by
    GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences
    Authors
    Tomka, Miklós
    License

    https://dbk.gesis.org/dbksearch/sdesc2.asp?no=3797https://dbk.gesis.org/dbksearch/sdesc2.asp?no=3797

    Area covered
    Hungary
    Description

    Moral, religious, societal, political, work, and family values of Europeans.

    Topics:

    Leisure time: importance of areas of life; feeling of happiness; memberships and honorary activities in clubs, parties, organizations, citizens´ initiatives and

  15. g

    EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Czech Republic

    • dbk.gesis.org
    • da-ra.de
    Updated Feb 15, 2014
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    Rabusic, Ladislav (2014). EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Czech Republic [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4232/1.11528
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 15, 2014
    Dataset provided by
    GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences
    Authors
    Rabusic, Ladislav
    License

    https://dbk.gesis.org/dbksearch/sdesc2.asp?no=3795https://dbk.gesis.org/dbksearch/sdesc2.asp?no=3795

    Area covered
    Czechia
    Description

    Moral, religious, societal, political, work, and family values of Europeans.

    Topics:

    Leisure time: importance of areas of life; feeling of happiness; memberships and honorary activities in clubs, parties, organizations, citizens´ initiatives and

  16. d

    EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Denmark

    • da-ra.de
    Updated Dec 28, 2012
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    EVS (2012). EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Denmark [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4232/1.11530
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 28, 2012
    Dataset provided by
    GESIS Data Archive
    da|ra
    Authors
    EVS
    Time period covered
    Apr 1, 1999 - Nov 30, 1999
    Area covered
    Denmark
    Description

    Face-to-face interviews with standardized questionnaire

  17. c

    European Values Study Longitudinal Data File 1981-2008 (EVS 1981-2008) –...

    • datacatalogue.cessda.eu
    • search.gesis.org
    • +2more
    Updated Mar 14, 2023
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    Gedeshi, Ilir; Zulehner, Paul M.; Rotman, David; Titarenko, Larissa; Billiet, Jaak; Dobbelaere, Karel; Kerkhofs, Jan; Swyngedouw, Marc; Voyé, Liliane; Fotev, Georgy; Marinov, Mario; Raichev, Andrei; Stoychev, Kancho; Kielty, J.F.; Nevitte, Neil; Baloban, Josip; Roudometof, Victor; Rabusic, Ladislav; Rehak, Jan; Gundelach, Peter; Petersen, E.; Riis, Ole; Röhme, Nils; Saar, Andrus; Lotti, Leila; Pehkonen, Juhani; Puranen, Bi; Riffault, Hélène; Stoetzel, Jean; Tchernia, Jean-François; Pachulia, Merab; Jagodzinski, Wolfgang; Klingemann, Hans-Dieter; Köcher, Renate; Noelle-Neumann, Elisabeth; Anheier, Helmut; Barker, David; Harding, Stephen; Heald, Gordon; Timms, Noel; Voas, David; Gari, Aikaterini; Georgas, James; Mylonas, Kostas; Hankiss, Elemer; Manchin, Robert; Rosta, Gergely; Tomka, Miklós; Haraldsson, Olafur; Jónsson, Fridrik H.; Olafsson, Stefan; Breen, Michael; Fahey, Tony; Fogarty, Michael; Kennedy, Kieran; Sinnott, Richard; Whelan, Chris; Abbruzzese, Salvatore; Calvaruso, Claudio; Gubert, Renzo; Rovati, Giancarlo; Zepa, Brigita; Alisauskiene, Rasa; Juknevicius, Stanislovas; Ziliukaite, Ruta; Estgen, Pol; Hausman, Pierre; Legrand, Michel; Petkovska, Antoanela; Abela, Anthony M.; Cachia-Caruana, Richard; Inganuez, Fr. Joe; Troisi, Joseph; Petruti, Doru; Besic, Milos; Arts, Wil A.; de Moor, Ruud; European Values Study; Hagenaars, Jacques A.P.; Halman, Loek; Luijkx, Ruud; Hayes, Bernadette C.; Smith, Alan; Listhaug, Ola; Jasinska-Kania, Aleksandra; Konieczna, Joanna; Marody, Mira; Cabral, Manuel Villaverde; Franca, Luis de; Ramos, Alice; Vala, Jorge; Pop, Lucien; Voicu, Malina; Zamfir, Catalin; Bashkirova, Elena; Gredelj, Stjepan; Kusá, Zuzana; Malnar, Brina; Tos, Niko; Elzo, Javier; Orizo, Francisco Andrés; Silvestre Cabrera, María; Bush, Karin; Lundasen, Susanne; Pettersson, Thorleif; Joye, Dominique; Esmer, Yilmaz; Balakireva, Olga; Inglehart, Ronald; Rosenberg, Florence; Sullivan, Edward (2023). European Values Study Longitudinal Data File 1981-2008 (EVS 1981-2008) – Restricted Use File [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4232/1.5174
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Mar 14, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    University of Limerick, Ireland
    University of Manchester, Great Britain
    Bashkirova & Partners, Russian Federation
    Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium
    National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Ukraine
    BBSS Gallup International, Bulgaria
    Institute of Marketing and Polls IMAS-INC, Republic of Moldova
    Institute of Culture, Philosophy and Art, Lithuania
    University of Leicester, Great Britain
    The Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI), Ireland
    Institute for Social Research, Lithuania
    Institut für Demoskopie Allensbach, Germany
    Faits et Opinions, France
    Uppsala University, Sweden
    University of Zagreb, Croatia
    University of Deusto, Spain
    Great Britain
    Tchernia Etudes Conseil, France
    SeSoPI Centre Intercommunautaire, Luxembourg
    University of Lisbon, Portugal
    CEPS/INSTEAD, Luxembourg
    SAAR POLL, Estonia
    University of Cyprus, Cyprus
    University of Ljubljana, Slovenia
    Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary
    Trinity College Dublin, Ireland
    University of Athens, Greece
    Gallup, Great Britain
    Bogazici University; Bahcesehir University, Turkey
    Center for Economic and Social Studies, Albania
    University of Iceland, Iceland
    Slovak Academy of Sciences, Slovak Republic
    Hungarian Religious Research Centre, Hungary
    University of Trento, Italy
    Belarus State University, Belarus
    Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate (CARA), USA
    Ersta Sköndal University College, Sweden
    Berlin Science Center for Social Research, Germany
    University of Vienna, Austria
    Pázmány Péter Catholic University, Hungary
    Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, Italy
    Theseus International Management Institute, France
    University of Michigan, USA
    Ss. Cyril and Methodius University, Republic of Macedonia
    Aarhus University, Denmark
    SIFO, Sweden
    The Gallup Organization, Canada
    DATA S.A.; Centro de Investigaciones Sociológicas, Spain
    Queen´s University Belfast, Northern Ireland
    University of Warsaw, Poland
    University of Cologne, Germany
    University of Copenhagen, Denmark
    ISR, Great Britain
    University of Belgrade, Serbia
    (Armenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Northern Cyprus)
    University of Calgary, Canada
    University of Trondheim; Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway
    Lithuanian Institute of Culture and Arts, Lithuania
    Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria
    Czech Republic
    Baltic Institute of Social Sciences, Latvia
    Georgian Opinion Research Business International (GORBI), Georgia
    University of Malta, Malta
    London School of Economics and Political Science, Great Britain
    Romanian Academy, Romania
    Malta
    University of Ulster, Northern Ireland
    Tilburg University, The Netherlands
    Masaryk University, Czech Republic
    Swiss Foundation for Research in Social Sciences (FORS), University of Lausanne, Switzerland
    TNS Gallup Oy, Finland
    University of Montenegro, Republic of Montenegro
    Authors
    Gedeshi, Ilir; Zulehner, Paul M.; Rotman, David; Titarenko, Larissa; Billiet, Jaak; Dobbelaere, Karel; Kerkhofs, Jan; Swyngedouw, Marc; Voyé, Liliane; Fotev, Georgy; Marinov, Mario; Raichev, Andrei; Stoychev, Kancho; Kielty, J.F.; Nevitte, Neil; Baloban, Josip; Roudometof, Victor; Rabusic, Ladislav; Rehak, Jan; Gundelach, Peter; Petersen, E.; Riis, Ole; Röhme, Nils; Saar, Andrus; Lotti, Leila; Pehkonen, Juhani; Puranen, Bi; Riffault, Hélène; Stoetzel, Jean; Tchernia, Jean-François; Pachulia, Merab; Jagodzinski, Wolfgang; Klingemann, Hans-Dieter; Köcher, Renate; Noelle-Neumann, Elisabeth; Anheier, Helmut; Barker, David; Harding, Stephen; Heald, Gordon; Timms, Noel; Voas, David; Gari, Aikaterini; Georgas, James; Mylonas, Kostas; Hankiss, Elemer; Manchin, Robert; Rosta, Gergely; Tomka, Miklós; Haraldsson, Olafur; Jónsson, Fridrik H.; Olafsson, Stefan; Breen, Michael; Fahey, Tony; Fogarty, Michael; Kennedy, Kieran; Sinnott, Richard; Whelan, Chris; Abbruzzese, Salvatore; Calvaruso, Claudio; Gubert, Renzo; Rovati, Giancarlo; Zepa, Brigita; Alisauskiene, Rasa; Juknevicius, Stanislovas; Ziliukaite, Ruta; Estgen, Pol; Hausman, Pierre; Legrand, Michel; Petkovska, Antoanela; Abela, Anthony M.; Cachia-Caruana, Richard; Inganuez, Fr. Joe; Troisi, Joseph; Petruti, Doru; Besic, Milos; Arts, Wil A.; de Moor, Ruud; European Values Study; Hagenaars, Jacques A.P.; Halman, Loek; Luijkx, Ruud; Hayes, Bernadette C.; Smith, Alan; Listhaug, Ola; Jasinska-Kania, Aleksandra; Konieczna, Joanna; Marody, Mira; Cabral, Manuel Villaverde; Franca, Luis de; Ramos, Alice; Vala, Jorge; Pop, Lucien; Voicu, Malina; Zamfir, Catalin; Bashkirova, Elena; Gredelj, Stjepan; Kusá, Zuzana; Malnar, Brina; Tos, Niko; Elzo, Javier; Orizo, Francisco Andrés; Silvestre Cabrera, María; Bush, Karin; Lundasen, Susanne; Pettersson, Thorleif; Joye, Dominique; Esmer, Yilmaz; Balakireva, Olga; Inglehart, Ronald; Rosenberg, Florence; Sullivan, Edward
    Time period covered
    1981 - 2008
    Area covered
    United States of America, Austria, Montenegro, Estonia, Moldova, Belarus, Germany, Lithuania, Portugal, Norway
    Measurement technique
    EVS 2008: Face-to-face interviews with standardized questionnaire. In all countries, fieldwork was conducted on the basis of detailed and uniform instructions prepared by the EVS advisory groups. The EVS questionnaires were administered as face-to-face interviews in the appropriate national language(s). As far as the data capture is concerned, CAPI or PAPI was used in nearly all countries. Exceptions are Finland (internet panel) and Sweden (postal survey). The English basic questionnaire was translated into other languages by means of the questionnaire translation system WebTrans, a web-based translation platform designed by Gallup Europe. The whole translation process was closely monitored and quasi-automated documented (see EVS (2010): EVS 2008 Guidelines and Recommendations. GESIS-Technical Reports 2010/16. Retrieved from <a href=http://www.europeanvaluesstudy.eu/ target=_blank> EVS webpage </a>.EVS 1999: Face-to-face interviews with standardized questionnaire. In Iceland about a quarter of the respondents were interviewed by telephone. These were respondents in remote areas of the country.EVS 1990: Personal interview with standardized questionnaireEVS 1981: Personal interview with standardized questionnaire
    Description

    This study is no longer up to date. Please, use the new study ZA7504: EVS Trend File 1981-2017 – Sensitive Dataset . The latest data file is also recommended as an improved update for analyses due to the improvements and data revisions.

    Moral, religious, societal, political, work, and family values of Europeans. Compilation of the data sets from 1981, 1990, 1999, and 2008.

    The variable overview allows for comparisons of trend variables of the four EVS waves 1981, 1990, 1999, and 2008. In addition, comparisons of original question texts across the waves 1999 and 2008 are supported.

    Topics: 1. Perceptions of life: importance of work, family, friends and acquaintances, leisure time, politics and religion (in Sweden: service to others); frequency of political discussions with friends; happiness; self-assessment of own health; feelings of: excitement or interest, restlessness, pride because of compliments, loneliness, joy about completing a thing, boredom, feeling good, depressed or unhappy, managing everything, sadness because of criticism; feelings of the respondent at home: relaxation, anxiety, happiness, aggression or safety.

    1. Leisure: way of spending leisure time and definition of leisure; partners for leisure time: alone, with family, friends, at busy places, colleagues, people at churches or at sport and culture; frequency of political discussions with friends and political opinion leadership; memberships and unpaid work (volunteering) in: social welfare services, religious or church organisations, education, or cultural activities, trade unions, political parties, local political actions, human rights, environmental or peace movement, professional associations, youth work, sports clubs, women´s groups, voluntary associations concerned with health consumption or other groups; motives for volunteering; aversion to people with other setting; feelings of loneliness.

    2. Work: reasons for people to live in need; importance of selected aspects of occupational work; employment status; general work satisfaction; freedom of decision-making in the job; importance of work (work ethics, scale); important aspects of leisure time; attitude towards following instructions at work without criticism (obedience work); jobs scarce: give priority to nationals over foreigners as well as men over women in jobs, able bodied people over handicapped people and forced retirement for the elderly; satisfaction with the financial situation of the household and expected situation in a year.

    Work Environment: work orientation and aspects of job satisfaction; importance of selected characteristics of professional work: good pay, little pressure, job security, respectable activity, flexible working hours, ability to show initiative, a lot of vacation, meeting objectives, responsibility, interesting work, meeting one´s own skills, nice colleagues, good career opportunities, serving society, contact with people, good physical conditions of work and weekend leisure, looking forward to work after the weekend, pride of one´s work, family friendly, have a say, people treated equally; perceived exploitation in the workplace; general job satisfaction (scale); satisfaction with job security; use of paid days off: look for additional salaried work, training, meeting with friends and family, additional working against boredom, voluntary work, hobbies, running one´s own business, relaxation.

    1. Religion: deism or nihilism; opinion about good and evil in everyone; feel remorse; being worth risking life for: own country, life of another person, justice, freedom, peace, religion; individual or general clear guidelines for good and evil; religious denomination; current and former religious denomination; raised religiously; current frequency of church attendance and at the age of 12; importance of religious celebration at birth, marriage and funeral; self-assessment of religiousness; churches give adequate answers to moral questions, problems of family life, spiritual needs and social problems of the country; assessment of the importance of religion for the future; attitude towards the role of the Church in political issues (scale); belief in God, life after death, soul, hell, heaven, sin, telepathy, reincarnation, angels, devil, resurrection from the dead; stick to religion vs. explore different traditions; personal God versus spirit or life force; own way of connecting with the divine; interest in the sacred or the supernatural; attitude towards the existence of one true religion; importance of God in one´s life (10-point-scalometer); experience of comfort and strength from religion and belief; moments of prayer and meditation; frequency of prayers; approval or rejection of the single 10 bids by the respondents and most people; supernatural experiences: feeling of connection with someone far away, seeing events that happened far away, felt in touch with someone dead, proximity to a powerful life force, change in the way of...
  18. d

    EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Luxembourg

    • da-ra.de
    • datacatalogue.cessda.eu
    • +1more
    Updated Dec 28, 2012
    + more versions
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    EVS (2012). EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Luxembourg [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4232/1.11545
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Dec 28, 2012
    Dataset provided by
    GESIS Data Archive
    da|ra
    Authors
    EVS
    Time period covered
    Jul 1, 1999 - Oct 31, 1999
    Area covered
    Luxembourg
    Description

    Face-to-face interviews with standardized questionnaire

  19. p

    EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Integrierter Datensatz

    • pollux-fid.de
    • search.gesis.org
    • +2more
    Updated 2011
    + more versions
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    Ukrainian Institute for Social Research, Ukraine (2011). EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Integrierter Datensatz [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4232/1.10789
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    2011
    Dataset provided by
    Rotman, David
    Fotev, Georgy
    Gundelach, Peter
    Balakireva, Olga
    Vala, Jorge
    Esmer, Yilmaz
    Ramos, Alice
    Halman, Loek
    Jónsson, Fridrik H.
    Harding, Stephen
    Gari, Aikaterini
    Abela, Anthony M.
    Titarenko, Larissa
    Marinov, Mario
    Gubert, Renzo
    Pop, Lucien
    Bawin, Bernadette
    Kusá, Zuzana
    Puranen, Bi
    Tomka, Miklós
    Mylonas, Kostas
    Billiet, Jaak
    Zepa, Brigita
    Baloban, Josip
    Jagodzinski, Wolfgang
    Orizo, Francisco Andrés
    Marody, Mira
    Anheier, Helmut
    Malnar, Brina
    Arts, Wil A.
    Hayes, Bernadette C.
    Dobbelaere, Karel
    Hagenaars, Jacques A.P.
    Voicu, Malina
    Pehkonen, Juhani
    Zamfir, Catalin
    Jasinska-Kania, Aleksandra
    Zulehner, Paul M.
    Tchernia, Jean-François
    Bashkirova, Elena
    Luijkx, Ruud
    Pettersson, Thorleif
    Saar, Andrus
    Legrand, Michel
    Konieczna, Joanna
    Olafsson, Stefan
    Cabral, Manuel Villaverde
    Estgen, Pol
    Georgas, James
    Juknevicius, Stanislovas
    Alishauskiene, Rasa
    Kerkhofs, Jan
    Fahey, Tony
    Sinnott, Richard
    Tos, Niko
    Elzo, Javier
    Rabusic, Ladislav
    Lithuanian Institute of Culture and Arts, Lithuania
    Tilburg University, The Netherlands
    Hungarian Religious Research Centre, Hungary
    University of Trento, Italy
    University of Liège, Belgium
    Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium
    University of Deusto, Spain
    Belarus State University, Belarus
    Ukrainian Institute for Social Research, Ukraine
    Trinity College Dublin, Ireland
    University of Athens, Greece
    University of Malta, Malta
    London School of Economics and Political Science, Great Britain
    The Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI), Ireland
    Institute for Social Research, Lithuania
    Masaryk University, Czech Republic
    SAAR POLL, Estonia
    University of Ljubljana, Slovenia
    Bogazici University, Turkey
    University of Vienna, Austria
    Bashkirova & Partners, Russian Federation
    DATA S.A., Spain
    University of Copenhagen, Denmark
    Romanian Academy, Romania
    Queen´s University Belfast, Northern Ireland
    University of Warsaw, Poland
    University of Cologne, Germany
    SeSoPI Centre Intercommunautaire, Luxembourg
    University of Lisbon, Portugal
    Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria
    TNS Gallup Oy, Finland
    Uppsala University, Sweden
    University of Zagreb, Croatia
    ISR Surveys, Great Britain
    University of Iceland, Iceland
    Slovak Academy of Sciences, Slovak Republic
    Baltic Institute of Social Sciences, Riga
    Theseus International Management Institute, France
    Tchernia Etudes Conseil, France
    Description

    Die Variablenübersicht über die vier Wellen EVS 1981, 1990, 1999/2000 und 2008
    ermöglicht die Identifizierung der Trendvariablen in allen vier Wellen sowie
    länderspezifischer Abweichungen im Fragewortlaut innerhalb und zwischen den EVS Wellen.

    Diese Übersicht ist abrufbar unter:
    Online Variable Overview.


    Moralische, religiöse, gesellschaftliche, politische, ökonomische und
    soziale Wertvorstellungen der Europäer.

    Themen: Das Fragenprogramm ist dreigeteilt: Neben einem gemeinsamen
    Fragenprogramm für alle Ländern gibt es ein freiwilliges Zusatzprogramm
    und weitere länderspezifische Fragen.

    1. Gemeinsames Fragenprogramm:

    Freizeit: Wichtigkeit der Lebensbereiche; Glücksgefühl;
    Mitgliedschaften und ehrenamtliche Tätigkeiten in Vereinen, Parteien,
    Organisationen, Bürgerinitiativen und Berufsorganisationen;
    Verkehrskreise in der Freizeit; Toleranz gegenüber Minderheiten,
    Andersgläubige und Ausländer; zwischenmenschliches Vertrauen;
    Selbstwirksamkeit (Skalometer); allgemeine Lebenszufriedenheit
    (Skalometer).

    Arbeitswelt: Wichtigkeit ausgewählter Merkmale beruflicher Arbeit
    (Skala); eigene Erwerbstätigkeit; allgemeine Arbeitszufriedenheit
    (Skalometer); Selbstbestimmung in der Arbeit (Skalometer); Arbeitsethos
    (Skala); Einstellung zu einer leistungsorientierten Bezahlung und zum
    kritiklosen Befolgen von Arbeitsanweisungen; Priorität von Inländern
    gegenüber Ausländern sowie Männern gegenüber Frauen bei
    Arbeitsplatzknappheit; vermuteter Vorrang individueller oder
    gesellschaftlicher Ursachen für die wirtschaftliche Notlage Einzelner;
    Entscheidungsfreiheit von Arbeitslosen zur Ablehnung eines
    Arbeitsangebots (Skalometer).

    Politik: Parteipräferenz; Einstellung zu ausländischen Arbeitnehmern
    im eigenen Land; Zukunftsangst; Assimilation und Integration von
    Immigranten; Vorstellung von einer gerechten Gesellschaft (mehr
    Wohlfahrtsstaat oder Liberalismus, Skala); Interesse an politischen
    Nachrichten in den Medien; Individualismus und Gemeinschaftsdenken;
    Politikinteresse; politische Partizipation; Selbsteinschätzung auf einem
    Links-Rechts-Kontinuum (Skalometer); Selbstverantwortlichkeit oder
    staatliche Vorsorge (Skalometer); Einstellung zur Wettbewerbsfreiheit
    und Unternehmerfreiheit (Skalometer); Demokratiezufriedenheit;
    Einstellung zum derzeitigen politischen System des Landes und
    Beurteilung des politischen Systems des Landes vor zehn Jahren
    (Skalometer); Präferenz für ein demokratisches politisches System oder
    für eine starke Führerschaft eines einzelnen Politikers (Skala);
    Einstellung zur Demokratie (Skala); Verlust nationaler Charakteristika
    durch die Vereinigung Europas.

    Religion: individueller oder genereller Maßstab für Gut und Böse;
    derzeitige und gegebenenfalls frühere Konfession; derzeitige
    Kirchgangshäufigkeit und im Alter von 12 Jahren; Wichtigkeit religiöser
    Feiern bei Geburt, Hochzeit und Beerdigung; Selbsteinschätzung der
    Religiosität; Kompetenz der Religionsgemeinschaft in moralischen Fragen,
    bei Problemen im Familienleben, bei geistigen Bedürfnissen und aktuellen
    sozialen Problemen des Landes; Glaube an Gott, an ein Leben nach dem
    Tod, an die Hölle, den Himmel, die Sünde, an Telepathie und an
    Wiedergeburt; Gottgläubigkeit oder Nihilismus (Skala); Wichtigkeit von
    Gott im eigenen Leben (Skalometer); Trost und Kraft durch den Glauben;
    Beten und Meditation; Gebetshäufigkeit; Besitz und Glauben an
    Glücksbringer oder Talisman (Skalometer); Lesen und Berücksichtigen von
    Horoskopen; Einstellung zur Trennung von Kirche (Religion) und Staat
    (Skala).

    Familie und Ehe: wichtigste Kriterien für eine erfolgreiche Ehe
    (Skala); Einstellung zur Ehe und zur traditionellen Familienstruktur
    (Skala); Einstellung zu eigenen Kindern (Skala); Einstellung zum
    traditionellen Rollenverständnis von Mann und Frau in Beruf und Familie
    (Skala); Einstellung zu einer traditionellen oder liberalen
    Eltern-Kind-Beziehung; Wichtigkeit von Erziehungszielen; Einstellung zur
    Abtreibung.

    Gesellschaft: Präferenz für individuelle Freiheit oder soziale
    Gleichheit; Postmaterialismus (Skala); präferierte gesellschaftliche
    Entwicklung (Skala); Einstellung zum technischen Fortschritt; Vertrauen
    in Institutionen; Beachtung der individuellen Menschenrechte im Lande;
    Einstellung zum Umweltschutz (Skala); Nähe zur Familie, zur
    Nachbarschaft, den Menschen in der Region, zu den Landsleuten, den
    Europäern und der Menschheit; Nähe zu älteren Menschen, zu Arbeitslosen,
    Ausländern und Behinderten sowie Bereitschaft sich für diese Gruppen
    einzusetzen; persönliche Gründe für Hilfeleistungen bei älteren Menschen
    sowie bei Ausländern; Identifikation mit dem Ort, der Region, der
    Nation, Europa und der Welt; Nationalstolz.

    Moral und Sexualität: moralische Einstellungen (Steuerhinterziehung,
    Diebstahl, Drogengebrauch, Lügen, Schmiergelder, Korruption, Euthanasie,
    Selbstmord, Umweltverschmutzung, Alkohol am Steuer; Skala); moralische
    Einstellungen zu Partnerschaft und Sexualität (Homosexualität,
    Abtreibung, Scheidung, Promiskuität; Skala); vermutete Verbreitung
    unmoralischer Verhaltensweisen in der Bevölkerung des Landes (Skala);
    Einstellung zu einer Bestrafung in Abhängigkeit von der Situation des
    Täters bzw. des Geschädigten (Skala).

    Demographie: Geschlecht; Geburtsjahr; Familienstand und Zusammenleben
    mit einem Partner; Kinderzahl; Schulbildung; Alter bei Beendigung der
    Schulausbildung; Berufstätigkeit; Vorgesetztenfunktion und
    Kontrollspanne; Betriebsgröße; Beruf (ISCO88) und berufliche Stellung;
    Dauer der Arbeitslosigkeit; Haushaltsgröße; Alter der Kinder im
    Haushalt; Haushaltsvorstand; Charakteristika des Haushaltsvorstands;
    Haushaltseinkommen.

    Zusätzlich verkodet wurden: Ortsgröße; Region; Land.

    2. In einigen Ländern wurde zusätzlich gefragt:
    Einstellung zur Privatisierung staatlicher Unternehmen (Skalometer);
    Bereitschaft für das eigene Land in den Krieg zu ziehen; Einstellung zu
    egalisierten oder leistungsorientierten Einkommen (Skalometer);
    Präferenz für individuelle oder staatliche Vorsorge für Renten sowie für
    Wohnung (Skalometer); Einstellung zu grundlegenden oder nur vorsichtigen
    Veränderungen des eigenen Lebens; Einstellung zur revolutionären
    Veränderung der Gesellschaft; Beurteilung der Lösbarkeit von
    Umweltproblemen, Kriminalität und Arbeitslosigkeit auf nationaler Ebene;
    Arbeitsplatzsicherheit; Gedanken über den Sinn des Lebens; Glaube an
    Engel und an übernatürliche Kräfte; Einstellung zur Ausübung religiöser
    Praktiken in der Schule; Einstellung zur Beschäftigung mit
    unterschiedlichen religiösen Traditionen; Einstellung zu einer
    Verbannung von religionsfeindlichen Büchern und Filmen; Einschätzung des
    Einflusses der Kirchen auf die Politik des Landes; moralische
    Vorstellungen über Schwarzfahren, politischen Mord, Embryonenforschung,
    Genmanipulation, Prostitution, Pädophilie (Skala); Vertrauen in die
    Landsleute.

    Interviewerrating: Schichtzugehörigkeit des Befragten;
    Kooperationsbereitschaft des Befragten.

    Zusätzlich verkodet wurden: Interviewdatum; Interviewdauer.

  20. g

    EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Denmark

    • datasearch.gesis.org
    11530
    Updated Dec 28, 2017
    + more versions
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    EVS (2017). EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Denmark [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4232/1.11530
    Explore at:
    11530Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 28, 2017
    Dataset provided by
    da|ra (Registration agency for social science and economic data)
    Authors
    EVS
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Denmark
    Description

    Moralische, religiöse, gesellschaftliche, politische, ökonomische und soziale Wertvorstellungen der Europäer.

    Themen:

    Freizeit: Wichtigkeit der Lebensbereiche; Glücksgefühl; Mitgliedschaften und ehrenamtliche Tätigkeiten in Vereinen, Parteien, Organisationen, Bürgerinitiativen und Berufsorganisationen; Verkehrskreise in der Freizeit; Toleranz gegenüber Minderheiten, Andersgläubige und Ausländer; zwischenmenschliches Vertrauen; Selbstwirksamkeit (Skalometer); allgemeine Lebenszufriedenheit (Skalometer).

    Arbeitswelt: Wichtigkeit ausgewählter Merkmale beruflicher Arbeit (Skala); eigene Erwerbstätigkeit; allgemeine Arbeitszufriedenheit (Skalometer); Selbstbestimmung in der Arbeit (Skalometer); Arbeitsethos (Skala); Einstellung zu einer leistungsorientierten Bezahlung und zum kritiklosen Befolgen von Arbeitsanweisungen; Priorität von Inländern gegenüber Ausländern sowie Männern gegenüber Frauen bei Arbeitsplatzknappheit; vermuteter Vorrang individueller oder gesellschaftlicher Ursachen für die wirtschaftliche Notlage Einzelner; Entscheidungsfreiheit von Arbeitslosen zur Ablehnung eines Arbeitsangebots (Skalometer).

    Politik: Parteipräferenz; Einstellung zu ausländischen Arbeitnehmern im eigenen Land; Zukunftsangst; Assimilation und Integration von Immigranten; Vorstellung von einer gerechten Gesellschaft (mehr Wohlfahrtsstaat oder Liberalismus, Skala); Interesse an politischen Nachrichten in den Medien; Individualismus und Gemeinschaftsdenken; Politikinteresse; politische Partizipation; Selbsteinschätzung auf einem Links-Rechts-Kontinuum (Skalometer); Selbstverantwortlichkeit oder staatliche Vorsorge (Skalometer); Einstellung zur Wettbewerbsfreiheit und Unternehmerfreiheit (Skalometer); Demokratiezufriedenheit; Einstellung zum derzeitigen politischen System des Landes und Beurteilung des politischen Systems des Landes vor zehn Jahren (Skalometer); Präferenz für ein demokratisches politisches System oder für eine starke Führerschaft eines einzelnen Politikers (Skala); Einstellung zur Demokratie (Skala); Verlust nationaler Charakteristika durch die Vereinigung Europas.

    Religion: individueller oder genereller Maßstab für Gut und Böse; derzeitige und gegebenenfalls frühere Konfession; derzeitige Kirchgangshäufigkeit und im Alter von 12 Jahren; Wichtigkeit religiöser Feiern bei Geburt, Hochzeit und Beerdigung; Selbsteinschätzung der Religiosität; Kompetenz der Religionsgemeinschaft in moralischen Fragen, bei Problemen im Familienleben, bei geistigen Bedürfnissen und aktuellen sozialen Problemen des Landes; Glaube an Gott, an ein Leben nach dem Tod, an die Hölle, den Himmel, die Sünde, an Telepathie und an Wiedergeburt; Gottgläubigkeit oder Nihilismus (Skala); Wichtigkeit von Gott im eigenen Leben (Skalometer); Trost und Kraft durch den Glauben; Beten und Meditation; Gebetshäufigkeit; Besitz und Glauben an Glücksbringer oder Talisman (Skalometer); Lesen und Berücksichtigen von Horoskopen; Einstellung zur Trennung von Kirche (Religion) und Staat (Skala).

    Familie und Ehe: wichtigste Kriterien für eine erfolgreiche Ehe (Skala); Einstellung zur Ehe und zur traditionellen Familienstruktur (Skala); Einstellung zu eigenen Kindern (Skala); Einstellung zum traditionellen Rollenverständnis von Mann und Frau in Beruf und Familie (Skala); Einstellung zu einer traditionellen oder liberalen Eltern-Kind-Beziehung; Wichtigkeit von Erziehungszielen; Einstellung zur Abtreibung.

    Gesellschaft: Präferenz für individuelle Freiheit oder soziale Gleichheit; Postmaterialismus (Skala); präferierte gesellschaftliche Entwicklung (Skala); Einstellung zum technischen Fortschritt; Vertrauen in Institutionen; Beachtung der individuellen Menschenrechte im Lande; Einstellung zum Umweltschutz (Skala); Nähe zur Familie, zur Nachbarschaft, den Menschen in der Region, zu den Landsleuten, den Europäern und der Menschheit; Nähe zu älteren Menschen, zu Arbeitslosen, Ausländern und Behinderten sowie Bereitschaft sich für diese Gruppen einzusetzen; persönliche Gründe für Hilfeleistungen bei älteren Menschen sowie bei Ausländern; Identifikation mit dem Ort, der Region, der Nation, Europa und der Welt; Nationalstolz.

    Moral und Sexualität: moralische Einstellungen (Steuerhinterziehung, Diebstahl, Drogengebrauch, Lügen, Schmiergelder, Korruption, Euthanasie, Selbstmord, Umweltverschmutzung, Alkohol am Steuer; Skala); moralische Einstellungen zu Partnerschaft und Sexualität (Homosexualität, Abtreibung, Scheidung, Promiskuität; Skala); vermutete Verbreitung unmoralischer Verhaltensweisen in der Bevölkerung des Landes (Skala); Einstellung zu einer Bestrafung in Abhängigkeit von der Situation des Täters bzw. des Geschädigten (Skala).

    Demographie: Geschlecht; Geburtsjahr; Familienstand und Zusammenleben mit einem Partner; Kinderzahl; Schulbildung; Alter bei Beendigung der Schulausbildung; Berufstätigkeit; Vorgesetztenfunktion und Kontrollspanne; Betriebsgröße; Beruf (ISCO88) und berufliche Stellung; Dauer der Arbeitslosigkeit; Haushaltsgröße; Alter der Kinder

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Halman, L.C.J.M. , Subfac. Sociale Wetenschappen (2025). European Values Study 1999/2000 - EVS'99/2000 : Release I - September 2003 (ZA Study 3811) [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.17026/dans-z7s-renb

European Values Study 1999/2000 - EVS'99/2000 : Release I - September 2003 (ZA Study 3811)

Explore at:
8 scholarly articles cite this dataset (View in Google Scholar)
Dataset updated
Jan 17, 2025
Dataset provided by
Universiteit van Tilburg
Authors
Halman, L.C.J.M. , Subfac. Sociale Wetenschappen
Description

The European Values Study is designed to enable cross-national comparison of values, beliefs and attitudes, as well as preferences and priorities, and the changes in time concerning these issues. Uniform questionnaires were used to interview representative samples in 33 European countries: Austria, Belarus, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Great Britain, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Latvia, Malta, Northern Ireland, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Spain, Sweden, Slovakia, Slovenia, Turkey, and the Ukraine. The EVS 1999/2000 is the third wave (after 1981 and 1990) covering the following fields: religion and morality / politics, society and economy / work and leisure-time / primary relations. For more detailed information, and information about updates: see also the EVS website.


Date Submitted: 2003-09-01
Date Submitted: 2007-07-30

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