Data Sources and
Technical Notes for the 2002 Data Update
Data Sources:
Data from NORC come the author's
analyses of the 1998 and 2000 General Social Survey.
Data from ISR come from the author's
analyses of the 1998 and 2000 National Election Studies.
Data from Gallup were based on
published data from the Gallup organization, provided by Jacob Ludwig.
Data from CBS/NYT come from the
author's analyses of CBS/NYT data available through ICPSR.
Technical Notes:
All data reported are for respondents
who are 21 years and older, except for the data from Gallup, which are for
respondents 18 years and older.
Sample sizes for white respondents
were all in excess of 1,000 cases, unless specified in the notes to the table
(see the Question Wording and Notes section in each table for details.)
Sample sizes for African American
respondents were substantially smaller. In cases where the sample size fell
below 100 cases, the results are shown in parentheses (). For most of the
NES data, the sample sizes for African American respondents were just over
100 cases. The sample sizes for the NORC and Gallup data ranged from several
hundred to nearly 1,000 (in the case of Gallup).
There have been shifts in mode
of administration over time. Recent Gallup data come from telephone surveys;
CBS/NYT data are based on telephone surveys; and NORC's General Social Survey
continues to be face-to-face. The NES has used some of both (see next two
points for details about the 1998 and 2000 NES). Unless specified in the "Question
Wording and Notes" section, data can be presumed to be from face-to-face
interviews.
Most of the respondents in the
1998 NES were interviewed by telephone (77 percent), with a small sample by
face-to-face (33 percent). Area probability sampling was used to select the
sample and interviewers went to the households and obtained telephone numbers,
which were then used to conduct the telephone interviews. Because mode of
administration was not randomly assigned, the data we present in these tables
were from the full sample of 1998 NES respondents.
The National Election Study in
2000 included a split-ballot mode experiment. For reasons of comparability
to previous time points, and because the mode of administration was randomly
assigned to respondents (unlike the 1998 NES), our analysis includes only
respondents who were interviewed in the face-to-face mode.