<?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/ICPSR05519.v1</identifier>
	<creators>
    	
			<creator>
				<creatorName>Teich, Albert H.</creatorName>
			</creator>
    	
	</creators>
	<titles>
		<title>International Politics and International Science:  A Study of Scientists' Attitudes, 1967  </title>
		
	</titles>
	<publisher>Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research</publisher>
	<publicationYear>1984</publicationYear>
	<subjects>
		
      		<subject>attitudes</subject>
      	
      		<subject>detente</subject>
      	
      		<subject>disarmament</subject>
      	
      		<subject>nuclear weapons</subject>
      	
      		<subject>opinions</subject>
      	
      		<subject>science</subject>
      	
      		<subject>scientists</subject>
      	
      		<subject>world politics</subject>
      	
      		<subject>world problems</subject>
      	
	</subjects>
	<dates>
		<date dateType="Available">1984-05-03</date>
		<date dateType="Updated">1992-02-16</date>
		
			
				
   				
   		
	</dates>
	<resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Dataset">
		
			survey data
		
	</resourceType>
	<alternateIdentifiers>
		<alternateIdentifier alternateIdentifierType="ICPSR Study Number">5519</alternateIdentifier>
	</alternateIdentifiers>
	<version>1</version>
	<descriptions>
		<description>This study contains data from interviews with 384
 scientists in the summer of 1967 on their attitudes, perceptions,
 opinions, and views on a range of scientific issues, as well as 
 biographical and professional background information. Respondents 
 were asked questions about working in an international laboratory, 
 political issues on which the majority of scientists and engineers 
 shared a common outlook, their nations' adoption of a unilateral 
 nuclear disarmament position, the detente between the West and 
 the European Communist countries, the proposed non-proliferation 
 treaty, and the effects of international perspectives on issues 
 and on their nations. Also elicited were respondents' views on a 
 world government and the possible transformation of the United 
 Nations (UN) into a world government, the possession of 
 thermonuclear weapons by respondents' nations and by a future 
 European military force, nuclear arms limitations, space exploration,
 and the chances for the United States or the Soviet Union to be the 
 first to reach the moon. Demographic variables include respondents' 
 place of birth, sex, nationality, marital status, occupation, 
 education, international travels, languages spoken, and patterns 
of electoral participation in their nations.</description>
		
		
		
 	</descriptions>
	
</resource>