<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>







<resource xmlns="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-2.2" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-2.2 http://schema.datacite.org/meta/kernel-2.2/metadata.xsd">
	<identifier identifierType="DOI">10.3886/ICPSR03091.v2</identifier>
	<creators>
    	
			<creator>
				<creatorName>Social and Community Planning Research</creatorName>
			</creator>
    	
	</creators>
	<titles>
		<title>British Social Attitudes Survey, 1987</title>
		
	</titles>
	<publisher>Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research</publisher>
	<publicationYear>2001</publicationYear>
	<subjects>
		
      		<subject>AIDS</subject>
      	
      		<subject>attitudes</subject>
      	
      		<subject>economic issues</subject>
      	
      		<subject>employment</subject>
      	
      		<subject>expectations</subject>
      	
      		<subject>defense (military)</subject>
      	
      		<subject>government programs</subject>
      	
      		<subject>government spending</subject>
      	
      		<subject>health care services</subject>
      	
      		<subject>housing</subject>
      	
      		<subject>family work relationship</subject>
      	
      		<subject>income</subject>
      	
      		<subject>international relations</subject>
      	
      		<subject>labor markets</subject>
      	
      		<subject>morality</subject>
      	
      		<subject>nutrition</subject>
      	
      		<subject>national economy</subject>
      	
      		<subject>news media</subject>
      	
      		<subject>occupations</subject>
      	
      		<subject>political issues</subject>
      	
      		<subject>political participation</subject>
      	
      		<subject>public confidence</subject>
      	
      		<subject>racial attitudes</subject>
      	
      		<subject>religious attitudes</subject>
      	
      		<subject>social attitudes</subject>
      	
      		<subject>social change</subject>
      	
      		<subject>social inequality</subject>
      	
      		<subject>social issues</subject>
      	
      		<subject>social values</subject>
      	
      		<subject>traffic</subject>
      	
      		<subject>trends</subject>
      	
      		<subject>values</subject>
      	
      		<subject>welfare services</subject>
      	
      		<subject>working women</subject>
      	
	</subjects>
	<dates>
		<date dateType="Available">2001-08-06</date>
		<date dateType="Updated">2005-07-22</date>
		
			
				
   				
   		
	</dates>
	<resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Dataset">
		
			survey data
		
	</resourceType>
	<alternateIdentifiers>
		<alternateIdentifier alternateIdentifierType="ICPSR Study Number">3091</alternateIdentifier>
	</alternateIdentifiers>
	<version>2</version>
	<descriptions>
		<description>This survey is part of a continuing series designed to
 monitor trends in a wide range of social attitudes in Great Britain.
 The British Social Attitudes Survey (BSA) is similar in purpose to the
 General Social Survey carried out by the National Opinion Research
 Center (NORC) in the United States. The BSA questionnaire had two
 parts, one administered by an interviewer and the other completed by
 the respondent. As in the past, the 1986 interview questionnaire
 contained a number of &quot;core&quot; questions covering the major topic areas
 of defense, the economy, labor market participation, and the welfare
 state. The 1987 self-enumerated questionnaire was devoted to a series
 of questions on a range of social, economic, political, and moral
 issues. Topics that received attention (by section) include: (1)
 newspaper readership, defense, international relations, (2) economic
 issues/policies, household income, economic activity, labor market
 participation, (3) the welfare state, the National Health Service,
 education, (4) race, social class, religion, (5) sex, gender, and
 moral issues, politics/institutions, (6) right/wrong, industry/jobs,
 (7) housing and the countryside, and (8) AIDS and housing. Beginning
 in 1985, an international initiative funded by the Nuffield
 Foundation, the International Social Survey Program (ISSP), also
 contributed a module to the BSA. The topic of the ISSP module in this
 collection was inequality. Additional demographic data gathered
 included age, gender, education, occupation, household income, marital
status, social class, and religious and political affiliations.</description>
		
		
		
 	</descriptions>
	
</resource>