Franklin
Staff View
LEADER 04273nmm a2200721 4500
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20160311124414.0
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m fo a u
007
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008
150105s2014 miu fo a eng d
001
9969001773503681
035
a| (MiAaI)ICPSR34993
035
a| (MiAaI)ICPSR34993
035
a| (PU)6900177-penndb-Voyager
040
a| MiAaI
c| MiAaI
d| PU
245
0
0
a| CBS News National Poll, February #1, 2013
h| [electronic resource]/
c| CBS News .
250
a| 2014-03-25
260
a| Ann Arbor, Mich.
b| Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor],
c| 2014.
300
a| 1 online resource.
490
1
a| ICPSR
v| 34993
506
a| Restricted for use by site license.
516
a| Numeric
500
a| Title from ICPSR DDI metadata of 2015-01-05.
530
a| Also available as downloadable files.
520
3
a| This poll, the first of two fielded in February 2013, is part of a continuing series of monthly surveys that solicits public opinion on a range of political and social issues. Respondents were asked their opinions on how well Barack Obama was handling the presidency, foreign policy, the economy, the situation in Afghanistan, threat of terrorism, the federal budget deficit, immigration, gun policy, energy policy, and whether Obama had clear plans and priorities going forward. Respondents were also asked about the national economy and whether they thought it was getting better, the best way to reduce the federal budget deficit, their experiences with the job market in their areas and how easy it was to find a job. Opinions were solicited regarding respondents' approval of Congress, the Republican and Democratic parties, John Boehner, Joe Biden, and Hilary Clinton. Additional topics included alternative energy, immigration, gun policy, global warming, Saturday mail delivery service, same-sex marriage, unmanned aircraft ("drone") use, Iran, employment opportunities, and the 2013 State of the Union Address. Demographic information includes sex, age, race, marital status, education level, household income, type of residential area (e.g. urban or rural), political party affiliation, political philosophy, voting behavior, whether respondents were registered to vote, religious affiliation, and whether respondents thought of themselves as born again Christians. Cf.: http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR34993.v1
650
7
a| Afghanistan War
2| icpsr
650
7
a| alternative energy
2| icpsr
650
7
a| attitudes
2| icpsr
650
7
a| Biden, Joe
2| icpsr
650
7
a| Boehner, John
2| icpsr
650
7
a| Clinton, Hillary
2| icpsr
650
7
a| Democratic Party (USA)
2| icpsr
650
7
a| employment
2| icpsr
650
7
a| energy policy
2| icpsr
650
7
a| federal budget deficit
2| icpsr
650
7
a| foreign policy
2| icpsr
650
7
a| global warming
2| icpsr
650
7
a| gun control
2| icpsr
650
7
a| gun control legislation
2| icpsr
650
7
a| gun regulation
2| icpsr
650
7
a| illegal immigrants
2| icpsr
650
7
a| immigration
2| icpsr
650
7
a| immigration policy
2| icpsr
650
7
a| immigration status
2| icpsr
650
7
a| mail delivery
2| icpsr
650
7
a| national economy
2| icpsr
650
7
a| Obama Administration (2009- )
2| icpsr
650
7
a| Obama, Barack
2| icpsr
650
7
a| political philosophy
2| icpsr
650
7
a| presidential performance
2| icpsr
650
7
a| public opinion
2| icpsr
650
7
a| Republican Party (USA)
2| icpsr
650
7
a| same-sex marriage
2| icpsr
650
7
a| State of the Union Address
2| icpsr
650
7
a| Tea Party movement
2| icpsr
650
7
a| terrorism
2| icpsr
650
7
a| trust in government
2| icpsr
650
7
a| unemployment
2| icpsr
650
7
a| United States Congress
2| icpsr
653
0
a| ICPSR XIV.C.1. Mass Political Behavior and Attitudes, Public Opinion on Political Matters, United States
a| ICPSR XIV.C. Mass Political Behavior and Attitudes, Public Opinion on Political Matters
700
1
a| CBS News
710
2
a| Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research.
830
0
a| ICPSR (Series)
v| 34993.
856
4
0
u| http://hdl.library.upenn.edu/1017.12/1573357
z| Connect to resource
3| Access to some datasets may require login with free personal MyData account