British Social Attitudes Survey

The British Social Attitudes Survey (BSA) is an annual statistical survey conducted in Great Britain by National Centre for Social Research since 1983.[1] The BSA involves in-depth interviews with over 3,300 respondents, selected using random probability sampling,[2] focused on topics including newspaper readership, political parties and trust, public expenditure, welfare benefits, health care, childcare, poverty, the labour market and the workplace, education, charitable giving, the countryside, transport and the environment, the European Union, economic prospects, race, religion, civil liberties, immigration, sentencing and prisons, fear of crime and the portrayal of sex and violence in the media.[3] The survey is funded by the Gatsby Charitable Foundation, government departments, quasi-governmental bodies and other grant-giving organisations. The BSA was not conducted in 1988 and 1992, when funding was devoted instead to studies of voting behaviour and political attitudes in the British Election Study.[1] The King’s Fund and Nuffield Trust stepped in when the government stopped funding the poll.[4]

  1. ^ a b "British Social Attitudes Survey catalogue page]". UK Data Service. Retrieved 8 November 2013.
  2. ^ "British Social Attitudes". National Centre for Social Research. September 2011. Retrieved 19 September 2011.
  3. ^ 30th British Social Attitudes report, NatCen Social Research, retrieved 8 November 2013
  4. ^ "View grows that NHS 'must live within its means' as satisfaction plummets". Health Service Journal. 30 March 2022. Retrieved 23 May 2022.

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