Political Communication and the Young Voter, 1970-1971
The purpose of this study was to collect data about the first-time elector, whose attitudes towards, exposure to and response to the flow of campaign communications during the 1970 and the 1974 General Election were examined in the context of political outlook, role and social situation. Attitudinal/Behavioural Questions Exposure to the media: data were given on radio exposure and listening habits, television exposure and whether the respondent watched TV news, newspaper readership (number of newspapers read, time taken and reasons for reading were given). Discussion with family members and friends: Common Market, Northern Ireland, unemployment, cost of living. Degree of political participation, activity, knowledge and interest. Voting patterns, interest in political conferences. Attitudes to present government, voting, political leaders, political parties, political issues, life in general and the role of a husband. Respondent's future plans in various domains. Background Variables Marital status, spouse's political affiliation, number of children, form of housing tenure, occupation, television ownership. Bank/building society, union membership, religious affiliation, church attendance, family communication patterns experienced at age 12 - 16, subjective social class.
Show More
Geographic Coverage:
GB, IE
Resource Type:
dataset
Study Design:
longitudinal, cohort
Available in Data Catalogs:
UK Data Service