2012 Latino Immigrant National Election Study (LINES) (ICPSR 36680)
2016 Latino Immigrant National Election Study (LINES), [United States] (ICPSR 38129)
The 2016 Latino Immigrant National Election Study (LINES) is a panel study of Latino foreign-born residents of the United States, with telephone surveys of nationally representative samples of respondents fielded in 3 waves over 2016-2017.
The first survey in the 2016 LINES took place during the general election campaign (August and September of 2016). Interviews (N = 1,800) were conducted in English and Spanish, although nearly all respondents opted for Spanish. Because many of the initial telephone numbers dialed were either out of service or otherwise unusable, the American Association for Public Opinion Research (AAPOR) "Response Rate 1" calculation is low (.034). However, in cases when an eligible immigrant was identified based on the initial screening questions, only 12 percent opted not to complete the survey. On average, an interview that fall lasted approximately 25 minutes.
After the 2016 election, 576 immigrants took part in the second survey wave, which was fielded during the presidential transition period (a 32 percent re-contact rate). At this time, an additional fresh sample of 260 Latino immigrants was added to the study, again to help gauge and ameliorate any potential respondent attrition biases. Finally, in the summer of 2017 (July through early-September), a third wave was conducted, with all 1,800 immigrants from the pre-election baseline survey being eligible for interviewing. In this period, 31 percent of these immigrants (N = 554) were surveyed; this included 321 respondents who had taken part in the second wave and 233 who had not. To increase the sample size at this time and address attrition over time, 500 fresh immigrants were surveyed. In total, 2,560 immigrants took part in the 2016-2017 LINES: 1,800 from before the election, 260 during the presidential transition period, and 300 in the summer of 2017.
The questionnaire instrumentation used in the study was largely adapted from item wordings in the 2012 American National Election Study (ANES). The survey focuses on immigrant civic engagement and political socialization, including items on immigrant attitudes, opinions and electoral and non-electoral political behavior.
ABC News Hurricane Katrina Anniversary Poll, August 2006 (ICPSR 4664)
ABC News "Nightline" Jackie Robinson Poll, February 1997 (ICPSR 2176)
ABC News O.J. Simpson Jury Poll, February 1997 (ICPSR 2174)
ABC News O.J. Simpson Viewpoint Poll, October 1995 (ICPSR 6680)
ABC News/Washington Post Poll #1, April 2006 (ICPSR 4659)
ABC News/Washington Post Poll, April 2007 (ICPSR 24586)
ABC News/Washington Post Poll, February 1986 (ICPSR 8574)
ABC News/Washington Post Poll, February 2007 (ICPSR 24584)
ABC News/Washington Post Poll, May 2007 (ICPSR 24588)
After the JD 2: A Longitudinal Study of Careers in Transition, 2007-2008, United States (ICPSR 33584)
American Citizen Participation Study Follow-Up: Singles and Couples Data, Fall 1993-Winter 1994 (ICPSR 23561)
American Community Survey (ACS): Public Use Microdata Sample (PUMS), 2002 (ICPSR 3893)
American Community Survey (ACS): Public Use Microdata Sample (PUMS), 2004 (ICPSR 4370)
American Community Survey (ACS): Public Use Microdata Sample (PUMS), 2006 (ICPSR 22101)
American Community Survey (ACS): Public Use Microdata Sample (PUMS), 2007 (ICPSR 24503)
American Community Survey (ACS): Public Use Microdata Sample (PUMS), 2008 (ICPSR 29263)
American Community Survey (ACS): Public Use Microdata Sample (PUMS), 2009 (ICPSR 33802)
American Community Survey (ACS): Three-Year Public Use Microdata Sample (PUMS), 2005-2007 (ICPSR 25042)
American Housing Survey, 2002: Metropolitan Microdata (ICPSR 4589)
American Housing Survey, 2004: Metropolitan Microdata (ICPSR 4592)
American Mosaic Project Survey, 2003 (ICPSR 28821)
American National Election Pilot Study, Spring 1979 (ICPSR 7709)
American National Election Series: 1972, 1974, 1976 (ICPSR 7607)
American National Election Studies, 1992-1997: Combined File (ICPSR 2407)
American National Election Studies, 2000, 2002, and 2004: Full Panel Study (ICPSR 21500)
American National Election Studies: 2006 ANES Pilot Study (ICPSR 21440)
American National Election Studies (ANES) Panel Study, 2008-2009 (ICPSR 29182)
The 2008-2009 ANES Panel Study is a telephone-recruited Internet panel with two cohorts recruited using nearly identical methods. The first cohort was recruited in late 2007 using random-digit-dialing (RDD) methods common to telephone surveys. Prospective respondents were offered $10 per month to complete surveys on the Internet each month for 21 months, from January 2008 through September 2009. Those without a computer and Internet service were offered a free web appliance, MSN TV 2, and free Internet service for the duration of the study. The second cohort was recruited the same way in the summer of 2008 and asked to join the panel beginning in September 2008. The recruitment interview was conducted by telephone in nearly all cases. A small number of respondents completed the recruitment survey on the Internet after failing to complete a telephone interview. Before the first monthly survey, most respondents also completed an online profile survey consisting primarily of demographic questions.
To minimize panel attrition and conditioning effects, only 7 of the 21 monthly surveys are about politics. Other surveys are about a variety of non-political topics. The panelists answered political questions prepared by ANES in January, February, June, September, October, and November 2008. With certainty, the panel answered more political questions in May 2009.
Note that the 2008-2009 ANES Panel Study is entirely separate from the 2008 ANES Time Series study, which was conducted using the traditional ANES method of face-to-face interviews before and after the 2008 election. Although there are a few questions common to both studies, the samples and methods are different. For further details, see the User Guide. Complete documentation is available on the ANES Web site.
American National Election Study, 1984: 1983 Pilot Study (ICPSR 8178)
American National Election Study: 1985 Pilot Study (ICPSR 8476)
American National Election Study, 1988: 1987 Pilot Study (ICPSR 8713)
American National Election Study, 1988: The Presidential Nomination Process [Super Tuesday] (ICPSR 9093)
American National Election Study: 1989 Pilot Study (ICPSR 9295)
American National Election Study: 1990-1991 Panel Study of the Political Consequences of War/1991 Pilot Study (ICPSR 9673)
American National Election Study, 1990-1992: Full Panel Survey (ICPSR 6230)
American National Election Study, 1990: Senate Election Study (ICPSR 9549)
American National Election Study: 1995 Pilot Study (ICPSR 6636)
American National Election Study: 1997 Pilot Study (ICPSR 2282)
American National Election Study: 1998 Pilot Study (ICPSR 2693)
American National Election Study: 2000 Pilot Study (ICPSR 2936)
American National Election Study: Pooled Senate Election Study, 1988, 1990, 1992 (ICPSR 9580)
Americans' Changing Lives: Waves I, II, III, IV, V, and VI, 1986, 1989, 1994, 2002, 2011, and 2021 (ICPSR 4690)
The Americans' Changing Lives (ACL) survey series is an ongoing, nationally representative, longitudinal study focusing especially on differences between Black and White Americans in middle and late life. These data constitute the first, second, third, fourth, fifth, and sixth waves in a panel survey covering a wide range of sociological, psychological, mental, and physical health items. Wave I of the study began in 1986 with a nation face-to-face survey of 3,617 adults ages 25 and up, with Black Americans and people aged 60 and over over-sampled at twice the rate of the others. Wave II constitutes face-to-face re-interviews in 1989 of those still alive. Survivors have been re-interviewed by telephone, and when necessary face-to-face, in 1994 (Wave III), 2001/02 (Wave IV), 2011 (Wave V), and 2019/21 (Wave VI).
Please note that for Wave VI, the majority of data collection occurred in 2019, with only a small subset (n=39) of participants surveyed in 2021.
ACL was designed and sought to investigate the following: (1) The ways in which a wide range of activities and social relationships that people engage in are broadly "productive," (2) how individuals adapt to acute life events and chronic stresses that threaten the maintenance of health, effective functioning, and productive activity, and (3) sociocultural variations in the nature, meaning, determinants, and consequences of productive activity and relationships. Among the topics covered are interpersonal relationships (spouse/partner, children, parents, friends), sources and levels of satisfaction, social interactions and leisure activities, traumatic life events (physical assault, serious illness, divorce, death of a loved one, financial or legal problems), perceptions of retirement, health behaviors (smoking, alcohol consumption, overweight, rest), and utilization of health care services (doctor visits, hospitalization, nursing home institutionalization, bed days). Also included are measures of physical health, psychological well-being, and indices referring to cognitive functioning.
Demographic information provided for individuals includes household composition, number of children and grandchildren, employment status, occupation and work history, income, family financial situation, religious beliefs and practices, ethnicity, race, education, sex, and region of residence.