Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World

Datasets

Pew Research Center makes the case-level microdata for much of its research available to the public for secondary analysis after a period of time. These datasets are listed below by collection date. A listing of our American Trends Panel datasets and religion datasets are also available. See this post for more information on how to use our datasets and contact us at info@pewresearch.org with any questions.

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    2017 Hispanic Post-Election Survey

    Field dates: 12/07/16 – 01/15/17
    Respondents: Nationally representative sample of 1,001 Latinos ages 18 and older.
    Margin of Error: +/- 3.6 percentage points at the 95% confidence interval.

    This survey focused on politics and immigration.

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    2016 National Survey of Latinos

    Field dates: 08/23/16 – 09/21/16
    Respondents: Nationally representative sample of 1,507 Latinos ages 18 and older.
    Margin of Error: +/- 3.3 percentage points at the 95% confidence interval.
    This survey focused on politics, 2016 elections, current issues, media and the American dream.

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    2016 Survey of Self-identified Non-Hispanics with Hispanic Ancestry

    Field dates: 11/11/15 – 02/07/16
    Respondents: Nationally representative sample of individuals ages 18 and older who do not identify as Latino or Hispanic, but report having Hispanic, Latino, Latin American or Spanish ancestry or heritage.
    Margin of Error: +/- 5.9 percentage points at the 95% confidence interval.

    This survey focused on identity, changes in racial identification overtime, parents’ views about Hispanicity, advantages and disadvantages of being Hispanic, political views, assimilation and the economy.

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    2015 National Survey of Latinos

    Field dates: 10/21/15 – 11/30/15
    Respondents: Nationally representative sample of 1,500 Latinos ages 18 and older.
    Margin of Error: +/- 3.3 percentage points at the 95% confidence interval.
    This survey focused on identity, Hispanics as a distinctive group, parents’ views about Hispanicity, advantages and disadvantages of being Hispanic, political views, assimilation, the economy and internet use.

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    2014 National Survey of Latinos

    Field dates: 09/11/14 – 10/09/14
    Respondents: Nationally representative sample of 1,520 Latinos ages 18 and older.
    Margin of Error: +/- 3.2 percentage points at the 95% confidence interval.

    This survey focused on politics, the 2014 election, immigration, job satisfaction and identity.

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